| Literature DB >> 32143380 |
Mariana Oliveira1,2, Vitor Vasconcelos1,2.
Abstract
Plant-based ingredients have been successfully replacing fishmeal in finished fish feeds. However, using crops in feeds results in an increased risk of contamination by fungi and mycotoxins and a higher incidence of mycotoxicosis in fish. This might decrease aquaculture's productivity as mycotoxicosis generally result in decreased body weight, growth impairment and higher rates of disease and mortality in fish. Additionally, some mycotoxins might accumulate in the fish musculature. As such, fish consumption might become another way for mycotoxins to enter the human food chain, threatening food security and public health as mycotoxins are important genotoxins, carcinogens and immunosuppressors to humans. In this work we aim to provide a review on the most important mycotoxins found in crops and in finished fish feed, i.e., aflatoxins, fumonisins, ochratoxins, trichothecenes and zearalenone. We present their effects on the health of fish and humans and their regulations in the European Union. Although work has been performed in mycotoxin research ever since the 1960s, a lot of information is still lacking regarding its effects. However, it is noticed that in order to use crops in aquafeed production, efforts should be made in order to monitor its contamination by mycotoxinogenic fungi and mycotoxins.Entities:
Keywords: aquaculture; bioaccumulation; fish feed; fungi; mycotoxicosis; mycotoxins; toxicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32143380 PMCID: PMC7150860 DOI: 10.3390/toxins12030160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
In vivo effects of aflatoxins and sterigmatocystin on fish. Effects were dose dependent.
| Type of Mycotoxin | Fish | Species | Dose (mg/kg) | Exposure Time | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aflatoxin B1 | Juvenile 18-month sturgeon |
| 0.01 | <15 days | Decreased feed intake and weigh loss. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Adult sea bass |
| 0.018 | 42 days | Abnormal behavior—sluggish movements, swimming imbalance, rapid opercular movement and loss of equilibrium. Muscular seizures prior to death. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Channel catfish |
| 12 | 10 days | Regurgitation of the stomach contents. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Channel catfish |
| 2.2–10 | 10 weeks | Reduced growth rate. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Red drum |
| 0.1–5 | 7 weeks | Reduced weight gain and feed efficiency. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Tilapia |
| 0.019–1.641 | 20 weeks | Reduced weight gain and growth. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Nile tilapia |
| 0.9–3.0 | 25 days | Reduced growth feed intake. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Nile tilapia |
| 0.25–100 | 8 weeks | Reduced weight gain. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Gibel carp |
| 0.0032–0.9915 | 12–16 weeks | No significant health effects were determined. | [ |
| Aflatoxin B1 | Juvenile gibel carp |
| 0.0032–0.0286 | 3 months | Slight damages to the hepatopancreas. | [ |
| Aflatoxins | Rainbow trout | Unspecified | 0.0018–0.0397 | Unspecified | Enlarged liver with histological changes—white or yellow nodules or cyst swellings, tumor-like lesions, irregular cords of abnormal hepatocytes, necrosis and hemorrhages. | [ |
| Aflatoxins | Tilapia | Unspecified | 0.0018–0.0397 | Unspecified | No tumor-like lesions were detected. | [ |
| Sterigmatocystin | Rainbow trout embryos |
| 0.5 | 14 days | Increased incidence of hepatocellular carcinomas among survivors 1 year later. | [ |
| Sterigmatocystin | Nile tilapia |
| 0.0016 | 4 weeks | Reduced body weight. | [ |
| Sterigmatocystin | Nile tilapia |
| 0.0016 | 4 weeks | Behavioral changes—unbalanced swimming. | [ |
In vivo effects of fumonisin B1 on different fish species. Effects were dose-dependent.
| Fish | Species | Dose (mg/kg) | Exposure Time | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fry of channel catfish |
| 20–40 | 10 weeks | Reduced weight gain and feed intake. Increase in feed conversion ratio. | [ |
| Channel catfish |
| 0.3–720 | 10–14 weeks | Reduction in weight gain and feed intake. | [ |
| Channel catfish |
| 35–313 | 5 weeks | No general negative health effects were noted. | [ |
| Nile tilapia fingerlings |
| 10–150 | 8 weeks | Reduction in weight gain. Higher feed conversion rates. | [ |
| Year-1 common carp |
| 10 and 100 | 42 days | Reduction in body weight. | [ |
In vivo effects of ochratoxin A in different fish species. Effects were dose dependent.
| Fish | Species | Dose (mg/kg) | Exposure Time | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sea bass |
| 0.05–0.4 | 24–96 hours | Behavioral changes—sluggish movement, loss of equilibrium, rapid operculum movement, changes in the swimming pattern and respiratory manifestation. Muscular seizures prior to death. | [ |
| Juvenile channel catfish |
| 0.5–8.0 | 8 weeks | Reduction in body weight gain. | [ |
| Nile tilapia |
| 3% of fish bodyweight | 14 days | Reduce weight gain, feed intake, final weight and feed conversion rate. | [ |
| Atlantic salmon |
| 0.2–2.4 | 8 weeks | Increase in alkaline phosphatase, cholesterol, total protein, albumin and aspartate transaminase. | [ |
In vivo effects of deoxynivalenol in different fish species. Effects were dose dependent.
| Fish | Species | Dose (mg/kg) | Exposure Time | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rainbow trout |
| 1.964 | 23 days | Gastrointestinal and liver hemorrhaging. | [ |
| Rainbow trout |
| 0.3–2.6 | 8 weeks | Reduction in weight gain and growth rate. | [ |
| Rainbow trout |
| 0.001–0.013 | 4 weeks | Reduction in feed intake and feed conversion efficiency. | [ |
| Rainbow trout |
| 3.3 and 6.4 | 4 weeks | Reduction in feed intake and weight gain. | [ |
| Atlantic salmon |
| 0.5–6 | 8 weeks | Reduced feed intake, feed efficiency, weight gain and length. | [ |
In vivo effects of zearalenone in different fish species. Effects were dose dependent.
| Fish | Species | Dose (mg/kg) | Exposure Time | Effects | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zebrafish |
| 0.001 | 140 days (life-cycle) | Increased weight gain and body length on female fish. | [ |
| Zebrafish |
| 0.1–3.2 | 42 days | Reduced of the relative spawning frequency. | [ |
| Rainbow trout | Unspecified | 2 | 96 weeks (life cycle) | Increased feeding efficiency and growth rate. | [ |