| Literature DB >> 30535711 |
Bonnie Valgaeren1,2, Léonard Théron3, Siska Croubels4, Mathias Devreese4, Siegrid De Baere4, Els Van Pamel5, Els Daeseleire5, Marthe De Boevre6, Sarah De Saeger6, Arnau Vidal6, José Diana Di Mavungu6, Philipp Fruhmann7,8, Gerhard Adam8, Alfons Callebaut9, Calixte Bayrou10, Vincent Frisée3, Anne-Sophie Rao3, Emilie Knapp3, Arnaud Sartelet3, Bart Pardon1, Piet Deprez1, Gunther Antonissen11,12.
Abstract
A clinical case in Belgium demonstrated that feeding a feed concentrate containing considerable levels of deoxynivalenol (DON, 1.13 mg/kg feed) induced severe liver failure in 2- to 3-month-old beef calves. Symptoms disappeared by replacing the highly contaminated corn and by stimulating ruminal development via roughage administration. A multi-mycotoxin contamination was demonstrated in feed samples collected at 15 different veal farms in Belgium. DON was most prevalent, contaminating 80% of the roughage samples (mixed straw and maize silage; average concentration in positives: 637 ± 621 µg/kg, max. 1818 µg/kg), and all feed concentrate samples (411 ± 156 µg/kg, max. 693 µg/kg). In order to evaluate the impact of roughage provision and its associated ruminal development on the gastro-intestinal absorption and biodegradation of DON and its acetylated derivatives (3- and 15-ADON) in calves, a toxicokinetic study was performed with two ruminating and two non-ruminating male calves. Animals received in succession a bolus of DON (120 µg/kg bodyweight (BW)), 15-ADON (50 µg/kg BW), and 3-ADON (25 µg/kg) by intravenous (IV) injection or per os (PO) in a cross-over design. The absolute oral bioavailability of DON was much higher in non-ruminating calves (50.7 ± 33.0%) compared to ruminating calves (4.1 ± 4.5%). Immediately following exposure, 3- and 15-ADON were hydrolysed to DON in ruminating calves. DON and its acetylated metabolites were mainly metabolized to DON-3-glucuronide, however, also small amounts of DON-15-glucuronide were detected in urine. DON degradation to deepoxy-DON (DOM-1) was only observed to a relevant extent in ruminating calves. Consequently, toxicity of DON in calves is closely related to roughage provision and the associated stage of ruminal development.Entities:
Keywords: 3- and 15-Acetyldeoxynivalenol; Biodegradation; Calf; Deoxynivalenol; Mycotoxin; Toxicokinetics
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30535711 DOI: 10.1007/s00204-018-2368-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Toxicol ISSN: 0340-5761 Impact factor: 5.153