| Literature DB >> 33933519 |
Dipendra Kumar Mahato1, Madhu Kamle2, Bharti Sharma3, Shikha Pandhi4, Sheetal Devi5, Kajal Dhawan6, Raman Selvakumar7, Diwakar Mishra8, Arvind Kumar9, Shalini Arora10, Namita Ashish Singh11, Pradeep Kumar12.
Abstract
The mycotoxin patulin is primarily produced as a secondary metabolite by numerous fungal species and predominantly by Aspergillus, Byssochlamys, and Penicillium species. It is generally associated with fungal infected food materials. Penicillium expansum is considered the only fungal species liable for patulin contamination in pome fruits, especially in apples and apple-based products. This toxin in food poses serious health concerns and economic threat, which has aroused the need to adopt effective detection and mitigation strategies. Understanding its origin sources and biosynthetic mechanism stands essential for efficiently designing a management strategy against this fungal contamination. This review aims to present an updated outline of the sources of patulin occurrence in different foods and their biosynthetic mechanisms. It further provides information regarding the detrimental effects of patulin on human and agriculture as well as its effective detection, management, and control strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Chemistry; Food contamination; Health issues; Management strategies; Patulin
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33933519 DOI: 10.1016/j.toxicon.2021.04.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicon ISSN: 0041-0101 Impact factor: 3.033