| Literature DB >> 34199457 |
Geni Rodrigues Sampaio1, Glória Maria Guizellini1, Simone Alves da Silva1,2, Adriana Palma de Almeida2, Ana Clara C Pinaffi-Langley1, Marcelo Macedo Rogero1, Adriano Costa de Camargo3, Elizabeth A F S Torres1.
Abstract
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are chemical compounds comprised of carbon and hydrogen molecules in a cyclic arrangement. PAHs are associated with risks to human health, especially carcinogenesis. One form of exposure to these compounds is through ingestion of contaminated food, which can occur during preparation and processing involving high temperatures (e.g., grilling, smoking, toasting, roasting, and frying) as well as through PAHs present in the soil, air, and water (i.e., environmental pollution). Differently from changes caused by microbiological characteristics and lipid oxidation, consumers cannot sensorially perceive PAH contamination in food products, thereby hindering their ability to reject these foods. Herein, the occurrence and biological effects of PAHs were comprehensively explored, as well as analytical methods to monitor their levels, legislations, and strategies to reduce their generation in food products. This review updates the current knowledge and addresses recent regulation changes concerning the widespread PAHs contamination in several types of food, often surpassing the concentration limits deemed acceptable by current legislations. Therefore, effective measures involving different food processing strategies are needed to prevent and reduce PAHs contamination, thereby decreasing human exposure and detrimental health effects. Furthermore, gaps in literature have been addressed to provide a basis for future studies.Entities:
Keywords: benzo[a]pyrene; cooking procedures; food contamination; food quality; polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34199457 PMCID: PMC8199595 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22116010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Chemical and physical properties of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons present in food.
| Compound Name | Abbreviation | Chemical Formula | Molecular Weight (g mol−1) | Melting Point (°C) | Boiling Point (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5-Methylchrysene | 5MC | C19H14 | 242.3 | 118 | 458 |
| Acenaphthene | ACE | C12H10 | 154.2 | 203 | 279 |
| Acenaphthylene | ACY | C12H8 | 152.2 | 92–93 | 265–275 |
| Anthracene | ANT | C14H10 | 178.2 | 218 | 340–342 |
| Benz[a]anthracene | BaA | C18H12 | 228.3 | 158 | 438 |
| Benzo[a]pyrene | BaP | C20H12 | 252.3 | 179 | 495 |
| Benzo[b]fluoranthene | BbF | C20H12 | 252.3 | 168 | 481 |
| Benzo[c]fluorene | BcF | C17H12 | 216.3 | 125–127 | 398 |
| Benzo[e]pyrene | BeP | C20H12 | 252.3 | 177 | 492 |
| Benzo[ghi]perylene | BPe | C22H12 | 276.3 | 273 | 550 |
| Benzo[j]fluoranthene | BjF | C20H12 | 252.3 | 165–166 | 480 |
| Benzo[k]fluoranthene | BkF | C20H12 | 252.3 | 216 | 480 |
| Chrysene | Chr | C18H12 | 228.3 | 254 | 448 |
| Cyclopenta[cd]pyrene | CPP | C18H10 | 226.3 | 170 | 439 |
| Dibenzo[a,e]pyrene | DeP | C24H14 | 302.4 | 233–244 | 592 |
| Dibenz[a,h]anthracene | DBA | C22H14 | 278.3 | 262 | 535 |
| Dibenzo[a,i]pyrene | DiP | C24H14 | 302.4 | 281–284 | 594 |
| Dibenzo[a,l]pyrene | DlP | C24H14 | 302.4 | 162 | 595 |
| Flourene | FLR | C13H10 | 166.2 | 116–117 | 295 |
| Fluoranthene | FLT | C16H10 | 202.3 | 111 | 375 |
| Indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene | IcP | C22H12 | 276.3 | 164 | 530 |
| Naphthalene | NAP | C10H8 | 128.2 | 80 | 218 |
| Phenanthrene | PHN | C14H10 | 178.2 | 100 | 340 |
| Pyrene | PYR | C16H10 | 202.3 | 156 | 393–404 |
Adapted from [15].
Figure 1Representation of different pathways of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon activation and its effects on human health. Based on information from [17,19].
International Agency for Research on Cancer carcinogenicity classification of 16 polycyclic aromatic compounds present in food.
| Group | Compound | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Benzo[a]pyrene | The agent (mixture) is carcinogenic to humans |
| 2A | Cyclopenta[cd]pyrene | The agent (mixture) is probably carcinogenic to humans |
| Dibenzo[a,l]pyrene | ||
| Dibenz[a,h]anthracene | ||
| 2B | Benzo[b]fluoranthene | The agent (mixture) is possibly carcinogenic to humans |
| Benzo[k]fluoranthene | ||
| Benzo[j]fluoranthene | ||
| Benz[a]anthracene | ||
| Chrysene | ||
| 5-Methylchrysene | ||
| Dibenzo[a,i]pyrene | ||
| Dibenzo[a,h]pyrene | ||
| Indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene | ||
| 3 | Benzo[ghi]perylene | The agent (mixture or exposure circumstance) is not classifiable as to its carcinogenicity to humans |
| Dibenzo[a,e]pyrene | ||
| Benzo[c]fluorene |
Adapted from [12].
Types of food processing.
| Type of Heat | Cooking Procedure | Characteristics |
|---|---|---|
| Dry | Baking | Indirect heat |
| Moist | Baking | Indirect heat, conducted by water |
| Moist | Bain-marie | Indirect baking with heat transfer control |
| Moist | Deep-frying | Indirect heat, conducted by oil |
| Dry | Gas grilling | Direct heat, controlled temperature |
| Dry | Charcoal roasting | Direct heat and smoke, partially controlled temperature |
| Dry | Smoking | Indirect heat and direct smoke |
| Dry | Microwave cooking | Indirect heat, heating by dissipation of water molecules |
| Moist | Stewing | Indirect heat, partially conducted by oil |
Adapted from Vintilă [48].
Summary of PAHs concentrations in various food products.
| Product | Processing Method | BaP | PAH4 a | Total Sum b | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Milk, Dairy and Baby Foods | |||||
| Baby foods ( | None | 0.19–0.55 | 1.02–3.12 | 11.82–52.25 (14) | [ |
| Milk powder ( | None | 0.13 | 2.36 | 169.99 (16) | [ |
| Milk powder formula ( | None | ≤LOD | 0.24 | 1.23 (15) | [ |
| Smoked mozzarella cheese ( | None | 0.09 | 0.84 | 1.24 (8) | [ |
| Pasteurized milk, UHT milk ( | None | ≤LOD–0.10 | ≤LOD–0.10 | 5.86–26.60 (16) | [ |
| Milk powder ( | None | 0.04 | 0.02–10.16 | 11.8–78.40 (15) | [ |
| Raw milk, Pasteurized milk, UHT milk ( | None | 0.25–0.27 | 1.21–1.59 | 5.43–7.75 (16) | [ |
| Vegetables and Fruits | |||||
| Fruits ( | None | ≤LOD | ≤LOD–0.59 | 0.19–1.08 (8) | [ |
| Vegetables ( | None | ≤LOD–0.35 | ≤LOD–3.28 | ND–3.81 (8) | [ |
| Vegetables ( | The samples were prepared according to each type of vegetable | ≤LOD–4.35 | ≤LOD–2.00 | 14.20–413.20 (16) | [ |
| Vegetables ( | None | ≤LOD–4.40 | 1.40–19.60 | 60.50–312.00 (16) | [ |
| Vegetables ( | None | 0.01–0.14 | - | 0.20–0.85 (8) | [ |
| Meat and Fish | |||||
| Chicken wings | Grilling (temperature) | 3.27 | 8.60 | 12.83 (8) | [ |
| 240 °C | 2.51 | 7.45 | 11.23 (8) | ||
| 210 °C | 1.38 | 6.59 | 10.10 (8) | ||
| Fish products | Fresh ( | <LOQ | <0.33 | <0.33(4) | [ |
| Marinated ( | |||||
| Smoked ( | |||||
| Shellfish ( | Fresh | <LOQ–3.43 | <0.27–7.92 | <0.27–7.92 (4) | |
| Meat products | Fermented sausages ( | <LOQ–5.40 | <0.40–7.10 | <0.40–7.10 (4) | |
| Semi-dry sausages ( | <LOQ–1.05 | <0.40–2.53 | <0.40–2.53 (4) | ||
| Pasteurized sausages ( | <LOQ–0.57 | 0.46–3.31 | 0.46–3.31 (4) | ||
| Dry cured meat | <LOQ–1.90 | 0.46–12.66 | 0.46–12.66 (4) | ||
| Semi-dry cured meat ( | <LOQ–2.48 | <0.40–9.44 | <0.40–9.44 (4) | ||
| Dry bacon ( | <LOQ | <0.40–9.45 | <0.40–9.45 (4) | ||
| Meat products | None | 0.19–1.73 | 0.59–7.55 | 0.59–11.05 (8) | [ |
| Cocoa and Chocolate | |||||
| Cocoa beans ( | Fermented and sun dried | <LOQ–9.06 | <LOQ–49.96 | <LOQ–63.30 (8) | [ |
| Cocoa beans ( | Fermented and dried | ≤LOD | ≤LOD–0.01 | 0.38–0.76 (11) | [ |
| 135 °C (40 min) | |||||
| 135 °C (50 min) | |||||
| 150 °C (25 min) | |||||
| 150 °C (35 min) | |||||
| 135 °C (7 min) | |||||
| 135 °C (10 min) | |||||
| 150 °C (5 min) | |||||
| 150 °C (7 min) | |||||
| Milk chocolate | None | ≤LOD | ≤LOD–36.2 | 48.70–147.00 (13) | [ |
| Dark chocolate | ≤LOD–38.5 | 87.80–149.00 (13) | |||
| White chocolate | ≤LOD–17.1 | 44.20–122.00 (13) | |||
| Raw cocoa beans ( | Unshelled, fermented, and dried | ≤LOD–9.98 | 0.88–44.28 | 0.88–44.28 (4) | [ |
| Cocoa mass ( | Finely ground cocoa nibs | ≤LOD–0.76 | 2.59–9.29 | 2.59–9.29 (4) | |
| Cocoa butter | Pressed cocoa mass | ≤LOD–7.86 | 2.09–92.53 | 2.09–92.53 (4) | |
| Milk chocolate | None | 0.70 | 10.11 | 10.11 (4) | |
| Dark chocolate | None | 0.57 | 5.88 | 5.88 (4) | |
| Cocoa powder | Finely ground cocoa press cake | 1.07 | 8.86 | 8.86 (4) | |
| Cocoa drink powder ( | Finely ground cocoa press cake | 1.00 | 9.48 | 9.48 (4) | |
| Chocolate candy | None | ≤LOD–12.76 | ≤LOD–17.11 | 2.70–235.16 (16) | [ |
| Cocoa beans ( | Drying and sun drying (65 °C. 70 °C, and 80 °C) | 0.15–0.42 | - | 0.15–0.42 (1) | [ |
| Chocolate ( | None | 0.07–0.63 | 0.69–4.45 | 1.33–6.85 (14) | [ |
| Bread and Cereal | |||||
| Bread samples | Commercial samples | <LOQ–0.20 | 0.11–0.22 | 0.11–0.22 (4) | [ |
| Breakfast cereals | Commercial samples | <LOQ–0.30 | 0.23–0.87 | 0.23–0.87 (4) | |
| Baguette ( | Baked (industrial) | - | 0.48–12.55 | 20.78–228.98 (13) | [ |
| Lavash ( | Baked for 80 s at 332 °C | - | 0.48–4.94 | 9.46–152.07 (13) | |
| Taftoon ( | Baked for 2.5 min at 315 °C | - | 0.48–20.66 | 18.19–169.26 (13) | |
| Pasta | Commercial samples | ≤LOD | ≤LOD–920 | 168–1980 (16) | [ |
| Cereal | ≤LOD–4200 | ≤LOD–7500 | 3500–22,300 (16) | ||
| Flour | ≤LOD | ≤LOD | 803–2486 (16) | ||
| Rice | ≤LOD | ≤LOD | 180–10,540 (16) | ||
| Bread | ≤LOD | ≤LOD–480 | 1290–4800 (16) | ||
| Toast | Toasted on an electric home toaster at 600 W for 2 min | ≤LOD–980 | 240–3450 | 13,000–17,820 (16) | |
Values are presented as mean or range, as appropriate. a PAH4: benz[a]anthracene, benzo[a]pyrene, benzo[b]fluoranthene, and chrysene. b The number in parentheses indicates the number of compounds included in the sum. LOD: limit of detection, LOQ: limit of quantification.
Recent techniques for the determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in food products.
| Food Product | Extraction | Clean-Up Step | Quantification | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Smoked fish and meat | Saponification (3.5 M methanolic potassium hydroxide solution at 70 °C for 2 h) and cyclohexane | Silica SPE cartridge | GC–QMS | [ |
| Dry/fermented sausage | Saponification (potassium hydroxide, methanol and water for 3 h under reflux) and extraction with | Florisil SPE cartridge | UHPLC-UV/VIS/FLD | [ |
| Beef meat | Saponification (sodium hydroxide and diatomaceous earth) | HPLC-FLD | [ | |
| Beef stripe, pork, and chicken fillet | Saponification (2 M methanolic potassium hydroxide solution) and extraction with | SPE in neutral-Si/basic-Si/acidic-Si/neutral-Si frits | GC–FID | [ |
| Dry fermented sausage | Acetonitrile, magnesium sulfate, and sodium chloride | QuEChERS (C18 + PSA) | GC-QMS | [ |
| Olive and refined pomace olive oils | Acetone/acetonitrile in an alumina-N SPE cartridge | Amine SPE cartridge | HPLC-FLD | [ |
| Salmon, shrimps, mussels, cutlet, bacon, curry spice, wheat flour, infant formula, cereal-based baby foods with fruits, and baby foods with vegetables | QuEChERS (Acetonitrile, and salts combinations) | QuEChERS (C18 + PSA), EMR-Lipid | GC- QqQMS | [ |
| Milk and meat/fish-based baby food | Saponification (1 M ethanolic potassium hydroxide solution at 80 °C for 3 h) | Washed the cyclohex-ane phase with meth-anol:water | HPLC-FLD | [ |
| Chicken breast, smoked ham, ham, roasted bacon, crispy bacon, pork sausage, Swedish meatballs, honey roast salmon, and sweet chili salmon | Saponification (sodium hydroxide and diatomaceous earth) | Silica SPE cartridge | HPLC-DAD/FLD | [ |
| Spices and meat | Homogenized with 1 M sodium hydroxide solution and | Silica SPE cartridge | HPLC-FLD | [ |
| Fruit, vegetables, and meats and their products | Saponification (ethanolic potassium hydroxide solution 80 °C for 3 h) and extraction with | Silica SPE cartridge | GC-QMS | [ |
| Fish and malt | Acetonitrile and ceramic stone | QuEChERS (Zirconium dispersive SPE) | GC-QTOF MS | [ |
| Fish, mollusk, and shrimp | ELL with ethyl acetate and aqueous solution containing magnesium sulfate and sodium chloride | Silica SPE cartridge | GC-MS | [ |
| Dark chocolate | Dichloromethane and | Gel permeation chromatography | [ | |
| Animal-based smoked foods | QuEChERS (Acetonitrile, water, and salts combinations) | QuEChERS (C18 + PSA), EMR-Lipid, DLLME | GC-Iontrap MS | [ |
| Extruded wheat flour, smoked fish, dry infant formula, sausage meat, freeze-dried mussels, edible oil, and wheat flour | SEC and SPE | GC-MS | [ | |
| Edible olive oil, fresh mussels, smoked fish, smoked meat products, processed cereal-based foods for young children, infant formula, chocolate, and food supplements (isoflavones) | Dichloromethane | SEC | HPLC-FLD | [ |
DLLME, dispersive liquid-liquid micro-extraction; ELL, extraction liquid-liquid; EMR, enhanced matrix removal; FID, flame ionization detector; FLD, fluorescence detector; GC, gas chromatograph; HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography; MS, single quadrupole, triple quadrupole, time-of-flight, or ion trap mass spectrometer; PRS, propyl sulphonic acid; PSA, primary secondary amine; SPE, solid-phase extraction; QMS, single quadrupole mass spectrometer, QqQMS, triple quadrupole mass spectrometer; QTOF MS, time-of-flight mass spectrometer; QuEChERS, quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged and safe method (solvent, salts combinations, and dispersive solid phase extraction sorbents); SEC, size-exclusion chromatography; UHPLC, ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography; UV, ultraviolet absorption detector; VIS, visible absorption detector.