| Literature DB >> 34200490 |
Mariya Kiseleva1, Zakhar Chalyy1, Irina Sedova1.
Abstract
Recent surveys report the occurrence of Aspergillus and Penicillium metabolites (aflatoxins (AFLs), ochratoxin A (OTA), cyclopiazonic and mycophenolic acids (MPA), sterigmatocystin (STC), citrinin), Fusarium (trichothecenes, zearalenone (ZEA), fumonisins (FBs), enniatins (ENNs)) and Alternaria (alternariol (AOH), its methyl ether (AME), tentoxin (TE), and tenuazonic acid (TNZ)) toxins in dry Camellia sinensis and herbal tea samples. Since tea is consumed in the form of infusion, correct risk assessment needs evaluation of mycotoxins' transfer rates. We have studied the transfer of AFLs, OTA, STC, deoxynivalenol (DON), ZEA, FBs, T-2, and HT-2 toxins, AOH, AME, TE, ENN A and B, beauvericin (BEA), and MPA from the spiked green tea matrix into an infusion under variation of preparation time and water characteristics (total dissolved solids (TDS) and pH). Analytes were detected by HPLC-MS/MS. The main factors affecting transfer rate proved to be mycotoxins' polarity, pH of the resulting infusion (for OTA, FB2, and MPA) and matrix-infusion contact period. The concentration of mycotoxins increased by 20-50% within the first ten minutes of infusing, after that kinetic curve changed slowly. The concentration of DON and FB2 increased by about 10%, for ZEA, MPA, and STC it stayed constant, while for T-2, TE, AOH, and AFLs G1 and G2 it went down. Maximum transfer correlated well with analytes polarity. Maximum transfer of ENNs, BEA, STC, ZEA, and AOH into infusion was below 25%; AFLs-25-45%; DON, TE, and T-2 toxins 60-90%, FB1-80-100%. The concentration of OTA, MPA, and FB2 in the infusion depended on its pH. At pH about four, 20%, 40%, and 60% of these toxins transferred into an infusion, at pH about seven, their concentrations doubled. Water TDS did not affect transfer significantly.Entities:
Keywords: Camellia sinensis and herbal tea; HPLC-MS/MS; infusion pH; infusions; mycotoxins; transfer kinetics; transfer rate; water TDS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34200490 PMCID: PMC8228356 DOI: 10.3390/toxins13060404
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 4.546
Occurrence of mycotoxins in C. sinensis tea, herbs, herbal teas, and supplements.
| Samples, | Analytes | Positives | Method | Ref. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Detected | Concentration, µg/kg | |||||
| Green tea, 129 | AFLs | AFL B1, B2, | 59 | <0.75–41.8 (B1); 1.2–75.4 (B2), | HPLC-FLD | [ |
| Green tea, 111 | 15 mycotoxins: AFLs, OTA, ZEA, | AOH: | 40 | max 5.9 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ |
| ZEA: | 35 | max 45.8 | ||||
| AFL G1: | 2 | max 1.6 | ||||
| AFL B2: | 2 | max 7.4 | ||||
| ENN B: | 2 | max 0.3 | ||||
| TE: | 1 | 4.6 | ||||
| Green tea, 15 | AFLs, | AFLs: | 13 | 1.0–2.8 | HPLC-FLD | [ |
| OTA: | 73 | 0.5–24 | ||||
| Black tea, 45 | AFLs, | AFLs: | 40 | 0.7–4.2 | ||
| OTA: | 91 | 5.1–30.9 | ||||
| Post-fermented tea, 158 | AFLs | AFL B1: | 1 sample | 2.1 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ |
| AFLs: | 1 sample | 3.9 | ||||
| Post-fermented tea, 108 | AFLs, OTA, DON, ZEA, FBs, T-2 | OTA: | 2 | max 36.4 | HPLC-UV, HPLC-FLD | [ |
| ZEA: | 5 | max 182.3 | ||||
| Pu-erh, 20 | 42 | DON and derivatives: | 100 | max 17,360 | 2D-LC-TOF | [ |
| AFL B1, B2, G1: | 40 (B1) | max 2.7 (B1) and 19.7 (AFLs) | ||||
| OTA/OTB: | 25/60 | max 4.1/max 30 | ||||
| STC: | 45 | max 93.4 | ||||
| ZEA: | 35 | max 56.1 | ||||
| Alternaria mycotoxins | 70 | - * | ||||
| ENNs | + * | - * | ||||
| Black tea, 63 | DON and derivatives: | 39 | max 537 | |||
| AFL B1, B2, G1 | 10 | max 3.5 (B1) and 13.9 (AFLs) | ||||
| OTA/OTB: | 6/NF | max 7.7 | ||||
| Green tea, 43 | DON and derivatives: | 59 | max 3086 | |||
| AFL B1, B2, G1 | 16 | max 3.0 (B1) and 7.7 (AFLs) | ||||
| OTA/OTB: | 9/NF | max 3.4/– | ||||
| STC: | 7 | max 13.0 | ||||
| T-2 + HT-2 | 5 | 13.7 and 42.4 | ||||
| ENNs | + * | - * | ||||
| Green and black tea, 50 | 29 | MPA: | 26 | max 200 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ |
| STC: | 5 | <4 | ||||
| ENN B: | 10 | <2.5 | ||||
| BEA: | 58 | <2.5 | ||||
| Herbs, herbal teas, and supplements | ||||||
| Herbal tea, 26 | 42 | DON and derivatives: | 35 | max 5631 | 2D-LC-TOF | [ |
| AFL B1, B2, G1 | 15 | max 15.7 (AFLs) | ||||
| OTA/OTB: | 15/15 | max 4.2/max 4.6 | ||||
| Alternaria mycotoxins, | 12 | - * | ||||
| ENNs | + * | - * | ||||
| Multicomponent | 29 mycotoxins | STC | 36 | 8–10 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ |
| MPA | 45 | 440–2240 | ||||
| TE | 54 | 5.2–9.2 | ||||
| ENNs | 64 | 2.8–55 | ||||
| Chinese herbal | AFL B1 | 23 | 0.02–1268.8 | -- | [ | |
| OTA | 26 | 0.01–158.7 | ||||
| ZEA | 41 | 0.2–931.07 | ||||
| FBs, DON, T-2 | + * | - * | ||||
| Chinese traditional medicinal herbs, 48 | AFLs, OTA, CIT | AFLs | 71 | max 6.3 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ |
| OTA | 29 | max 515 | ||||
| CIT | 8 | max 53 | ||||
| Herbs, 37 | TNZ | 73 | max 4868 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ | |
| TE | 30 | max 67 | ||||
| AOH | 19 | max 64 | ||||
| AME | 54 | max 161 | ||||
| Herbs and herbal tea, 37 (Portugal) | AFLs, ZEA | AFLs | 65 | 2.8–28.2 | SPE-ELISA | [ |
| ZEA | 62 | 1.8–19.0 | ||||
| Herbal dietary | 57 mycotoxins | DON | 23 | max: 2890 | HPLC-MS/MS | [ |
| T-2/HT-2 | 38/31 | max 1870/max 1530 | ||||
| ZEA | 52 | max 824 | ||||
| AOH | 69 | max 4650 | ||||
| AME | 78 | max 1080 | ||||
| TE | 46 | max 1280 | ||||
| TNZ | 12 | max: 6780 | ||||
| ENNs | 53–61 | max 9260 (ENN B) | ||||
| BEA | 64 | max 2730 | ||||
| MPA | 20 | max 3260 | ||||
| STC | 13 | max 42 | ||||
| OTA | 1 | max 956 | ||||
| PAT | 1 | max 380 | ||||
| Medicinal herbs | AFLs | - * | max 380 (B1); max 13.5 (B2); | - | [ | |
| max 190 (G1); max 3.2 (G2) | ||||||
| OTA | max 253 | |||||
| STC | max 20 | |||||
| ZEA | max 211 | |||||
| FBs | max 237 | |||||
| DON | max 344 | |||||
| CIT | max 354 | |||||
| T-2 | max 60.5 | |||||
*—is not presented in the original paper and cannot not be calculated from available data; NF—not found; OTB—ochratoxin B; CIT—citrinin; PAT—patulin.
Figure 1The effect of contact period on the mycotoxins transfers from spiked green tea matrix into infusion.
Figure 2Recovery of mycotoxins from bare spike into an infusion.
Figure 3Recovery of AFL G1, T-2, MPA, OTA, and FBs from the spiked matrix into an infusion. —DW, —DW-W, —NMW. Empty symbols indicate points excluded from data set for evaluation of average transfer.
Mycotoxins’ dissociation constants, experimental (logP) and computed polarity (XlogP3-AA) according to literature data, and average transfer rate into infusion.
| Mycotoxin | pKa | logP | XlogP3-AA [ | Transfer, % | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AFL B1 | neutral | 17.8 [ | 0.45 [ | 1.6 | 33 ± 3 |
| AFL B2 | neutral | 1.3 | 41 ± 5 | ||
| AFL G1 | neutral | 1.8 | 34 ± 9 | ||
| AFL G2 | neutral | 1.5 | 47 ± 6 | ||
| STC | neutral | 3.4 | 12 ± 2 | ||
| OTA | amphoteric | 3.29/−2.20 [ | 4.4 (pH 3)/1.1 (pH 7) [ | 4.7 | 38–80 * |
| MPA | acidic | 4.2 [ | 3.2 | 38–86 * | |
| DONDW,D-WW | neutral | 11.91 [ | −1.41 (pH 3)/−1.41 (pH 7) [ | −0.7 | 83 ± 5 |
| DONNMW | 70 ± 5 | ||||
| ZEA | acidic | 7.41 [ | 3.83(pH 3)/3.72 (pH 7) [ | 3.6 | 15 ± 3 |
| FB1 | amphoteric | 3.64/9.29 [ | −0.61 (pH 3)/−3.23 (pH 7) [ | −0.5 | 89 ± 10 |
| FB2 | amphoteric | 3.64/9.25 [ | 1.58 (pH 3)/−1.04 (pH 7) [ | 1.2 | 40–103 * |
| HT-2 | neutral | 13.26 [ | 2.27 (pH 3)/2.27 (pH 7) [ | 0.4 | 78 ± 14 |
| T-2 | neutral | 13.23 [ | 2.25 (pH 3)/2.25 (pH 7) [ | 0.9 | 71 ± 8 |
| ALT | acidic | 7.5 [ | 0.87 [ | 0.7 | 67 ± 8 |
| TE | acidic | 5.33 [ | 1.21 [ | 2 | 73 ± 9 |
| AOH | acidic | 7.16 [ | 3.03 (pH 3)/3.06 (pH 7) [ | 2.9 | 18 ± 4 |
| AME | acidic | 6.99 [ | 3.93 (pH 3)/3.62 (pH 7) [ | 3.2 | <12.5 ** |
| ENN BDW | basic | −1.08 [ | 3.05 (pH 3)/3.05 (pH 7) [ | 6.5 | 12 ± 4 |
| ENN BD-WW,NMW | 6.5 | <3 ** | |||
| ENN A | basic | −0.96 [ | 4.64 (pH 3)/4.64 (pH 7) [ | 7.6 | <5 ** |
| BEA | neutral | 18.8 [ | 5.5 (pH 3)/5.5 (pH 7) [ | 8.4 | <5 ** |
*—transfer is pH-dependent; **—were not quantified in infusions (maximum transfer evaluated using LOQ).
Figure 4Correlation of mycotoxins polarity and their transfer into the infusion. Filled diamonds—experimental results, empty—maximum transfer predicted from LOQ.