| Literature DB >> 28608841 |
Ahmad Alshannaq1,2, Jae-Hyuk Yu3,4.
Abstract
Mycotoxins are toxic secondary metabolites produced by certain filamentous fungi (molds). These low molecular weight compounds (usually less than 1000 Daltons) are naturally occurring and practically unavoidable. They can enter our food chain either directly from plant-based food components contaminated with mycotoxins or by indirect contamination from the growth of toxigenic fungi on food. Mycotoxins can accumulate in maturing corn, cereals, soybeans, sorghum, peanuts, and other food and feed crops in the field and in grain during transportation. Consumption of mycotoxin-contaminated food or feed can cause acute or chronic toxicity in human and animals. In addition to concerns over adverse effects from direct consumption of mycotoxin-contaminated foods and feeds, there is also public health concern over the potential ingestion of animal-derived food products, such as meat, milk, or eggs, containing residues or metabolites of mycotoxins. Members of three fungal genera, Aspergillus, Fusarium, and Penicillium, are the major mycotoxin producers. While over 300 mycotoxins have been identified, six (aflatoxins, trichothecenes, zearalenone, fumonisins, ochratoxins, and patulin) are regularly found in food, posing unpredictable and ongoing food safety problems worldwide. This review summarizes the toxicity of the six mycotoxins, foods commonly contaminated by one or more of them, and the current methods for detection and analysis of these mycotoxins.Entities:
Keywords: aflatoxin; analysis; chromatography; fungi; mycotoxins; rapid strip test; toxicology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28608841 PMCID: PMC5486318 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph14060632
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Major mycotoxins and US and EU limits on food and animal feed levels.
| Mycotoxin | Fungal Species | Food Commodity | US FDA (µg/kg) | EU (EC 2006) (µg/kg) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, G2 | Maize, wheat, rice, peanut, sorghum, pistachio, almond, ground nuts, tree nuts, figs, cottonseed, spices | 20 for total | 2–12 for B1 | |
| Aflatoxin M1 | Metabolite of aflatoxin B1 | Milk, milk | 0.5 | 0.05 in milk |
| Ochratoxin A | Cereals, dried vine fruit, wine, grapes, coffee, cocoa, cheese | Not set | 2–10 | |
| Fumonisins B1, B2, B3 | Maize, maize, products, sorghum, asparagus | 2000–4000 | 200–1000 | |
| Zearalenone | Cereals, cereal products, maize, wheat, barley | Not set | 20–100 | |
| Deoxynivalenol | Cereals, cereal products | 1000 | 200–50 | |
| Patulin | Apples, apple juice, and concentrate | 50 | 10–50 |
Figure 1Chemical structures of aflatoxins (structures from www.chemspider.com).
Figure 2Ochratoxin A (structure from www.chemspider.com).
Figure 3Zearalenone (structure from www.chemspider.com).
Figure 4Fuminisin B1 (structure from www.chemspider.com).
Figure 5Deoxynivalenol (structure from www.chemspider.com).
Figure 6Patulin (structure from www.chemspider.com).
Figure 7Flow diagram of common steps involved in mycotoxins analysis in food commodities.