| Literature DB >> 30380767 |
Irina Sedova1, Mariya Kiseleva2, Victor Tutelyan3.
Abstract
Tea is one of the most popular beverages all over the world. Being an everyday drink for almost everyone, for centuries tea was considered safe and healthy. However, fungal contamination of tea at any stage of commodity production can pose a serious health hazard due to the accumulation of toxic secondary metabolites of moulds. Contemporary research revealed incidences of highly contaminated samples. Mycotoxin transfer from naturally contaminated raw tea into beverage was well studied for ochratoxin A only, and the possible leak of other mycotoxins is discussed. The results of several surveys were combined to evaluate aflatoxin B1 and ochratoxin A contamination levels in black tea and Pu-erh. Exposure estimate to aflatoxin B1 and ochratoxin A due to tea consumption was carried out based on these data. Average contamination level corresponds to the exposure of 3⁻40% (aflatoxin B1) and 5⁻24% (ochratoxin A) of mean overall estimates for different cluster diets. Lack of data does not allow the conclusion for the necessity of public health protection measures. It is necessary to perform representative studies of different kinds of tea for regulated mycotoxins at least. Contemporary techniques for analysis of mycotoxins in tea are summarised in the present review.Entities:
Keywords: Camellia sinensis; Pu-erh; exposure; food safety; methods of determination; moulds; mycotoxins; occurrence; tea
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30380767 PMCID: PMC6266826 DOI: 10.3390/toxins10110444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Figure 1The common types of tea processing stages and associated mycoflora.
The occurrence of mycotoxins in tea.
| Tea | Country | Mycotoxin Positive/All Samples | Mycotoxin Content, μg/kg | LOD/LOQ, µg/kg | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
|
| Portugal | FBs: 16/18 | 80–280 (average *: 149) | 20/- | [ |
| Turkey | FBs:5/51 | >LOD, <LOQ | 31/468 (FВ1), | [ | |
| Iran | AFL В1: 11/40 | average: 10 | 1.0/- (AFL B1, G1), | [ | |
| Korea | AFL: 1/9 | 1.45 | -/- | [ | |
| Russia | STC: 2/26 | 0.4; 0.4 | 0.1-50/- | [ | |
|
| Turkey | FBs: 0/3 | n.d. | 31/468 (FВ1), | [ |
| Italy | AFL: 0/6 | n.d. | 0.5/- (AFL B1, G1) | [ | |
| Brazil | AFL: 1/9 | <LOQ | -/1 | [ | |
| Russia | 21 МТ: 0/4 | n.d. | 0.1–50/- | [ | |
| Germany | ОТА: 1/32 | 1.3 | -/- | [ | |
|
| Spain | AFL: 4/4 ** | 94.2–853.4 | 1.4 (ΣAFL) | [ |
|
| Belgium, China | FВ1: 1/91 | 76 | 2–122/- (raw tea), | [ |
|
| Austria | AFL В1, FBs:0/36, | n.d. | 1.7/- (Σ AFL), | [ |
| China | AFL В1: 70/70 | 0.02–8.5 | -/- | [ | |
| China | AFL В1: 21/30 | 0.4–15.1 | -/- | [ | |
|
| |||||
|
| Italy | ОТА: 11/16 | 1.4–21.5 (average: 6.3) | 0.01 | [ |
| Spain *** | 17 МТ: 0/12 | n.d. | LOD: 0.05–10 μg/L | [ | |
| Czech Republic | ОТА: 4/12 | 1.9–250 (average: 33.1) | LOD: 0.1, LOQ: 0.35 | [ | |
|
| Italy | ОТА: 14/16 | 0.1–20.0 (average: 7.2) | LOD: 0.01 | [ |
| Spain *** | ENN В: 2/10 | ~LOQ (~0.2 µg/L) | LOD: 0.05–10 μg/L | [ | |
|
| AFL В2: 6/8 | 14.4–32.2 (average: 26) | |||
|
| 17 МТ: 0/14 | n.d. | |||
Notes: MT—mycotoxins, AFL—aflatoxin, FBs—fumonisins, FВ1—fumonisin В1, STC—sterigmatocystin, ОТА—ochratoxin А, DON—deoxynivalenol, ENN В—enniatin В, Т-2—Т-2 toxin, CIT—citrinin, ZEN—zearalenone; LOD—limit of detection, LOQ—limit of quantification, n.d.—not detected. * an average of all tested samples. ** sample contamination was examined by ELISA, the results are rather qualitative, than quantitative. *** mycotoxins were detected in brewed tea.
Exposure estimate to aflatoxin B1 and ochratoxin A from tea.
| Mycotoxin | Tea | Data Numberof Samples, Origin | Contamination *, μg/kg | Exposure, ng/kg bw | Dietary Intake, ng/kg bw | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median | Mean | Max | Median | Mean | Max | |||||
|
| Black | 40, Iran [ | <LOQ | 5.3 | 190 |
| negligible | 0.16 | 5.7 | 0.4–2.6 [ |
| Pu-erh | 36, Austria [ | 1.6 | 2.6 | 15.1 | 0.05 | 0.08 | 0.45 | |||
|
| Black | 12, Czech Republic [ | <LOQ | 9.2 | 250 |
| negligible | 1.93 | 52.5 | 8–17 [ |
| Pu-erh | 36, Austria [ | <LOQ | 3.8 | 94.7 | negligible | 0.80 | 19.9 | |||
* Lower bound approach was used to calculate means, i.e., samples below LOD or LOQ were considered as zero.
Methods of mycotoxin determination in tea.
| Detection (Mycotoxin) | Tea | Publication. Year | Short Description | Sensitivity, μg/kg ** | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Extraction/Clean up | HPLC/Detection | |||||
|
| Herbal raw | 1998 | MeCN:Н2О (9:1, | TLC: silica gel | - | [ |
|
| Black raw | 2001 | MeOH:Н2О (3:1, | Derivatisation (o-phthaldialdehyde), | 31/468 (FВ1), | [ |
|
| Black, green raw | 2004 | MeOH:Н2О (3:1, | Derivatisation (o-phthaldialdehyde), | LOD: ~30 (FВ1), | [ |
|
| Herbal, green raw | 2007 | MeOH:Н2О (80:20, | HPLC: ODS | LOD: | [ |
|
| Red, white raw | 2009 | ELISA | LOD: | [ | |
|
| White, green, yellow, black, oolong, Pu-erh raw and beverage | 2010 | Ethyl acetate: formic acid (99:1, | UHPLC: ODS | LOD: | [ |
|
| Black raw | 2012 | MeCN:MeOH:Н2О (10:6:4, | HPLC: ODS | LOD: | [ |
|
| Green raw | 2012 | Acetone:Н2О (85:15) | HPLC: ODS | LOQ: 1 | [ |
|
| Pu-erh raw | 2013 | AFL:MeOH:Н2О (70:30, | AFL: HPLC: ODS | LOD: | [ |
|
| Herbal raw | 2013 | MeOH:Н2О (70:30, | ELISA | LOD: | [ |
|
| Black raw | 2013 | MeOH:Н2О (80:20, | HPLC: ODS | LOD: | [ |
|
| Black raw, beverage | 2014 | Raw: CHCl3 + alkalinisation/acidification | HPLC: ODS | LOD: 0.1 | [ |
|
| Pu-erh raw | 2014 | MeOH:Н2О (70:30, | FВ1, DON, Т-2: ELISA | - | [ |
|
| Pu-erh raw | 2015 | MeCN:Н2О (84:16, | ELISA | - | [ |
|
| Raw tea | 2015 | QuEChERS | HPLC: ODS | 1–1000 | [ |
|
| Herbal raw | 2016 | MeOH:Н2О (6:4, | HPLC: ODS | LOD: | [ |
|
| Black, green, red, green + mint beverage | 2017 | Dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction by MeCN-ethyl acetate and MеОН-chloroform | HPLC: ODS | LOD: 0.05–10 μg/L | [ |
|
| Black, green | 2018 | MeCN: Н2О:acetic acid (79:20:1) | HPLC: ODS | LOD: 0.1–50 | [ |
|
| Tea bags | 2018 | MeOH/NaHCO3aq. 1%, (70/30) | HPLC: ODS | LOD: 0.01 | [ |
|
| Green tea raw, brew | 2018 | -QuEChERS without dSPE (raw) | HPLC: ODS | FBs—n.d. | [ |
* TLC—thin layer chromatography, SPE—solid-phase extraction, dSPE—dispersive SPE, IAC—immunoaffinity column, ODS—octadecyl silica gel, FLD—fluorimetric detection, λEx/Em—excitation/emission wavelength, TFA—trifluoroacetic acid, ESI—electrospray ionisation, HRMS/MS—high-resolution tandem mass spectrometric detection. **—for HPLC-MS/MS method validation most of the authors follow SANTE requirements since 2015: SANTE 11945/2015 and its later upgrade SANTE/11813/2017 [61].