| Literature DB >> 31637463 |
David Stadler1, Franz Berthiller1, Michele Suman2, Rainer Schuhmacher1, Rudolf Krska3,4.
Abstract
Food processing can lead to a reduction of contaminants, such as mycotoxins. However, for food processing operations where thermal energy is employed, it is often not clear whether a reduction of mycotoxins also results in a mitigation of the toxicological impact. This is often due to the reason that the formed degradation products are not characterized and data on their toxicity is scarce. From the perspective of an analytical chemist, the elucidation of the fate of a contaminant in a complex food matrix is extremely challenging. An overview of the analytical approaches is given here, and the application and limitations are exemplified based on cases that can be found in recent literature. As most studies rely on targeted analysis, it is not clear whether the predetermined set of compounds differs from the degradation products that are actually formed during food processing. Although untargeted analysis allows for the elucidation of the complete spectrum of degradation products, only one such study is available so far. Further pitfalls include insufficient precision, natural contamination with masked forms of mycotoxins and interferences that are caused by the food matrix. One topic that is of paramount importance for both targeted and untargeted approaches is the availability of reference standards to identity and quantity the formed degradation products. Our vision is that more studies need to be published that characterize the formed degradation products, collect data on their toxicity and thereby complete the knowledge about the mycotoxin mitigating effect during food processing.Entities:
Keywords: Food contaminants; Liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry; Thermal degradation; Trichothecenes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31637463 PMCID: PMC6989622 DOI: 10.1007/s00216-019-02101-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Bioanal Chem ISSN: 1618-2642 Impact factor: 4.142
Overview of the degradation products of mycotoxins during thermal food processing. FB, fumonisin B1, OTA, ochratoxin A, DON, deoxynivalenol, NIV, nivalenol, PHFB, partially hydrolyzed FB1, HFB, hydrolyzed FB1, NDF, N-(1-deoxy--fructose-1-yl), NCM, N-(carboxymethyl)
| Food process | Parent mycotoxin | Degradation products |
|---|---|---|
| Baking | DON NIV | isoDON, norDONs A–C [ norNIVs A–C [ |
| Nixtamalization | FB1 | PHFB1, HFB1, NDF-FB1, NCM-FB1 [ FB1-polysaccharide, FB1-protein [ |
| Coffee roasting | OTA | 14-R-OTA, 14-decarboxy-OTA [ OTA-polysaccharide [ |
Fig. 1Number of publications found in Web of Science (https://apps.webofknowledge.com, accessed 11.04.2019)
Definition and comparison of the untargeted and targeted approach for the determination of the fate of mycotoxins during food processing
| Targeted | Untargeted | |
|---|---|---|
| Definition [ | Any analytical method that is aimed at the determination of a specific analyte or of a group of analytes. The analytical procedure should be properly validated for the target “known” analytes | An analytical method, mainly based on mass spectrometry followed by data mining and elaboration, aimed at the acquisition of undefined information from a sample (“profiling”). Information about “known” and “unknown” analytes can be obtained in the post-acquisition data elaboration |
| Analyte identification [ | Identification • Authentic reference standards | Unknown compounds • No information is available Putatively characterization • Use certain properties that indicate analyte class Putatively annotation • Similarities in physiochemical properties and/or spectral similarities with spectral libraries Identification • Authentic reference standards |
| Quantification | Absolute | Relative |
| Advantages | • Identification and accurate quantitation of a defined set of analytes which is predetermined by the scientific question at hand • Low limit of detection/quantification can be achieved | Find the complete spectrum of the extractable degradation products |
| Disadvantages | Analytes that are formed and not part of the defined set of analytes are not discovered | Without authentic reference standards, analyte quantitation is not possible. • Often the majority of the analytes cannot be characterized, annotated and/or identified and remains “known unknowns” |
Comparison of the thermal degradation products of mycotoxins found in model experiments and that confirmed in food matrices. FB, fumonisin B1, OTA, ochratoxin A, DON, deoxynivalenol, NIV, nivalenol, PHFB, partially hydrolyzed FB1, HFB, hydrolyzed FB1, NDF, N-(1-deoxy-d-fructose-1-yl), NCM, N-(carboxymethyl)
| Parent mycotoxin | Degradation products | |
|---|---|---|
| Solvent or model experiments | Confirmed in food samples | |
| DON | isoDON, norDONs A–F, DON-lactone, 9-hydroxymethyl DON lactone [ | isoDON, norDONs A–C [ |
| NIV | norNIVs A–C, NIV lactone [ | norNIV B [ |
| T-2 toxin | Compounds 1–3 [ | Compound 3 [ |
| FB1 | PHFB1, HFB1, NDF-FB1, NCM-FB1, FB1-polysaccharide, FB1-protein [ | PHFB1, HFB1, NCM-FB1, NCM-FB1, FB1-protein [ |
| OTA | 14-R-OTA, 14-decarboxy-OTA, OTA-α-amide, OTA-polysaccharide [ | 14-R-OTA, 14-decarboxy-OTA OTA-polysaccharide [ |
Fig. 2Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry chromatogram of mixture of standards of neat solvent (top) and a bread sample made from dough which was fortified with deoxynivalenol (DON) [5]. Different colors represent different mass transitions
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the untargeted search for the degradation products of deoxynivalenol (DON) that are formed during the production of bakery products [5]. Top: High-resolution liquid chromatography high-resolution mass spectrum of a bakery product that was prepared from dough that was fortified with DON and 13C-labelled DON. Bottom: Signals that carried the unique isotopic fingerprint were filtered from the mass spectrum using the software tool MetExtract II. The identification of the putatively annotated degradation products (degr.1–3) was carried out by comparison with reference standards
Fig. 4Deoxynivalenol (DON) degradation/increase that was found during the production of bread from batches of flour with a varying DON concentration [28]
Fig. 5Comparison of the accuracy for the quantitation of the degradation of the parent mycotoxin and the increase of its degradation products [5]. Error bars represent the standard deviation