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Aflatoxin

Aflatoxins are various poisonous carcinogens and mutagens that are produced by certain molds, particularly Aspergillus species. The fungi grow in soil, decaying vegetation and various staple foodstuffs and commodities such as hay, sweetcorn, wheat, millet, sorghum, cassava, rice, chili peppers, cottonseed, peanuts, tree nuts, sesame seeds, sunflower seeds, and various spices. In short, the relevant fungi grow on almost any crop or food. When such contaminated food is processed or consumed, the aflatoxins enter the general food supply. They have been found in both pet and human foods, as well as in feedstocks for agricultural animals. Animals fed contaminated food can pass aflatoxin transformation products into eggs, milk products, and meat.[1] For example, contaminated poultry feed is the suspected source of aflatoxin-contaminated chicken meat and eggs in Pakistan.[2]

Chemical structure of aflatoxin B1

Children are particularly affected by aflatoxin exposure, which is associated with stunted growth,[3] delayed development,[4] liver damage, and liver cancer. An association between childhood stunting and aflatoxin exposure[5] has been reported in some studies[6][7] but could not be detected in all.[8][9] Furthermore, a causal relationship between childhood stunting and aflatoxin exposure has yet to be conclusively shown by epidemiological studies, though such investigations are underway.[10][11][12] Adults have a higher tolerance to exposure, but are also at risk. No animal species is immune. Aflatoxins are among the most carcinogenic substances known.[13] After entering the body, aflatoxins may be metabolized by the liver to a reactive epoxide intermediate or hydroxylated to become the less harmful aflatoxin M1.

Aflatoxin poisoning most commonly results from ingestion, but the most toxic aflatoxin compound, B1, can permeate through the skin.[14]

The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) action levels for aflatoxin present in food or feed is 20 to 300 ppb.[15] The FDA has had occasion to declare both human and pet food recalls as a precautionary measure to prevent exposure.

The term "aflatoxin" is derived from the name of the species Aspergillus flavus, in which some of the compounds first were discovered. The word was coined around 1960 after its discovery as the source of "Turkey X disease".[16] Aflatoxins form one of the major groupings of mycotoxins, and apart from Aspergillus flavus various members of the group of compounds occur in species such as: Aspergillus parasiticus, Aspergillus pseudocaelatus, Aspergillus pseudonomius, and Aspergillus nomius.[17]

Major types and their metabolites edit

Aflatoxin B1 is considered the most toxic and is produced by both Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus. Aflatoxin M1 is present in the fermentation broth of Aspergillus parasiticus, but it and aflatoxin M2 are also produced when an infected liver metabolizes aflatoxin B1 and B2.

  • Aflatoxin B1 and B2 (AFB), produced by Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus
  • Aflatoxin G1 and G2 (AFG), produced by some Group II A. flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus[18]
  • Aflatoxin M1 (AFM1), metabolite of aflatoxin B1 in humans and animals (exposure in ng levels may come from a mother's milk)
  • Aflatoxin M2, metabolite of aflatoxin B2 in milk of cattle fed on contaminated foods[19]
  • Aflatoxicol (AFL): metabolite produced by breaking down the lactone ring
  • Aflatoxin Q1 (AFQ1), major metabolite of AFB1 in in vitro liver preparations of other higher vertebrates[20]

AFM, AFQ, and AFL retain the possibility to become an epoxide. Nevertheless, they appear much less capable of causing mutagenesis than the unmetabolized toxin.[21]

Contamination conditions edit

Aflatoxins are produced by both Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus, which are common forms of 'weedy' molds widespread in nature. The presence of those molds does not always indicate that harmful levels of aflatoxin are present, but does indicate a significant risk. The molds can colonize and contaminate food before harvest or during storage, especially following prolonged exposure to a high-humidity environment, or to stressful conditions such as drought. Aflatoxin contamination is increasing in crops such as maize as a result of climate change creating better conditions for these molds.[22][23]

The native habitat of Aspergillus is in soil, decaying vegetation, hay, and grains undergoing microbiological deterioration, but it invades all types of organic substrates whenever conditions are favorable for its growth. Favorable conditions for production of aflatoxins include high moisture content (at least 7%) and temperatures from 55 °F (13 °C) to 104 °F (40 °C) [optimum 27 to 30 °C (81 to 86 °F)].[24][25] Aflatoxins have been isolated from all major cereal crops, and from sources as diverse as peanut butter and cannabis. The staple commodities regularly contaminated with aflatoxins include cassava, chilies, corn, cotton seed, millet, peanuts, rice, sorghum, sunflower seeds, tree nuts, wheat, and a variety of spices intended for human or animal consumption. Aflatoxin transformation products are sometimes found in eggs, milk products, and meat when animals are fed contaminated grains.[1][26]

A study conducted in Kenya and Mali found that the predominant practices for drying and storage of maize were inadequate in minimizing exposure to aflatoxins.[27]

Organic crops, which are not treated with fungicides, may be more susceptible to contamination with aflatoxins.[28]

Prevention edit

A primary means of limiting risk from aflatoxins in the food supply is food hygiene in the commercial commodity supply chain, such as rejecting moldy grain for use in food processing plants and testing of batches of ingredients for aflatoxin levels before adding them to the mix. Regulatory agencies such as the FDA set limits on acceptable levels. Grain drying itself, which is necessary for viable combine harvesting in many regions, lays the fundamentals for this effort by preventing stored grain from being too damp in the first place.

There is very limited evidence to show that agricultural and nutritional education can reduce exposure to aflatoxin in low to middle income countries.[29]

Pathology edit

No animal species is known to be immune to the acute toxic effects of aflatoxins. Adult humans have a high tolerance for aflatoxin exposure and rarely succumb to acute aflatoxicosis,[30] but children are particularly affected, and their exposure can lead to stunted growth and delayed development, in addition to all the symptoms mentioned below.[4]

High-level aflatoxin exposure produces an acute hepatic necrosis (acute aflatoxicosis), resulting later in cirrhosis or carcinoma of the liver. Acute liver failure is made manifest by bleeding, edema, alteration in digestion, changes to the absorption and/or metabolism of nutrients, and mental changes and/or coma.[30]

Chronic, subclinical exposure does not lead to symptoms so dramatic as acute aflatoxicosis. Chronic exposure increases the risk of developing liver and gallbladder cancer,[31] as aflatoxin metabolites may intercalate into DNA and alkylate the bases through epoxide moiety. This is thought to cause mutations in the p53 gene, an important gene in preventing cell cycle progression when there are DNA mutations, or signaling apoptosis (programmed cell death). These mutations seem to affect some base pair locations more than others, for example, the third base of codon 249 of the p53 gene appears to be more susceptible to aflatoxin-mediated mutations than nearby bases.[32] As with other DNA-alkylating agents, Aflatoxin B1 can cause immune suppression, and exposure to it is associated with an increased viral load in HIV positive individuals.[33][34]

The expression of aflatoxin-related diseases is influenced by factors such as species, age, nutrition, sex, and the possibility of concurrent exposure to other toxins. The main target organ in mammals is the liver, so aflatoxicosis primarily is a hepatic disease. Conditions increasing the likelihood of aflatoxicosis in humans include limited availability of food, environmental conditions that favour mould growth on foodstuffs, and lack of regulatory systems for aflatoxin monitoring and control.[35]

A regular diet including apiaceous vegetables, such as carrots, parsnips, celery, and parsley may reduce the carcinogenic effects of aflatoxin.[36]

There is no specific antidote for aflatoxicosis. Symptomatic and supportive care tailored to the severity of the liver disease may include intravenous fluids with dextrose, active vitamin K, B vitamins, and a restricted, but high-quality protein diet with adequate carbohydrate content.

In other animals edit

In dogs, aflatoxin has potential to lead to liver disease. Low levels of aflatoxin exposure require continuous consumption for several weeks to months in order for signs of liver dysfunction to appear.[37] Some articles have suggested the toxic level in dog food is 100–300 ppb and requires continuous exposure or consumption for a few weeks to months to develop aflatoxicosis.[38] No information is available to suggest that recovered dogs will later succumb to an aflatoxin-induced disease.

Turkeys are extremely susceptible to aflatoxicosis. Recent studies have revealed that this is due to the efficient cytochrome P450 mediated metabolism of aflatoxin B1 in the liver of turkeys and deficient glutathione-S-transferase mediated detoxification.[39][40]

Some studies on pregnant hamsters showed a significant relationship between exposure of aflatoxin B1 (4 mg/kg, single dose) and the appearance of developmental anomalies in their offspring.[41]

In 2005, Diamond Pet Foods discovered aflatoxin in a product manufactured at their facility in Gaston, South Carolina.[42][43] In 23 states, Diamond voluntarily recalled 19 products formulated with corn and manufactured in the Gaston facility. Testing of more than 2,700 finished product samples conducted by laboratories confirmed that only two date codes of two adult dog formulas had the potential to be toxic.[44]

In December 2020 and January 2021, Midwestern Pet Foods recalled dog food that contained fatal levels of aflatoxin.[45] As many as 70 dogs had died from aflatoxin poisoning by January 12, 2021.[46]

Detection in humans edit

There are two principal techniques that have been used most often to detect levels of aflatoxin in humans.

The first method is measuring the AFB1-guanine adduct in the urine of subjects. The presence of this breakdown product indicates exposure to aflatoxin B1 during the past 24 hours. This technique measures only recent exposure, however. Due to the half-life of this metabolite, the level of AFB1-guanine measured may vary from day to day, based on diet, it is not ideal for assessing long-term exposure.

Another technique that has been used is a measurement of the AFB1-albumin adduct level in the blood serum. This approach provides a more integrated measure of exposure over several weeks or months.

List of outbreaks edit

International sources of commercial peanut butter, cooking oils (e.g. olive, peanut and sesame oil), and cosmetics have been identified as contaminated with aflatoxin.[47][48][49] In some instances, liquid chromatographytandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS), and other analytical methods, revealed a range from 48% to 80% of selected product samples as containing detectable quantities of aflatoxin. In many of these contaminated food products, the aflatoxin exceeded the safe limits of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or other regulatory agency.[48][49][50]

  • 1973 Poland: 10 died following the opening of the Tomb of Casimir IV Jagiellon, which contained Aflatoxin-producing molds.[51]
  • 2004 Kenya: acute outbreak of aflatoxicosis resulting from ingestion of contaminated maize, 125 confirmed deaths. [52]
  • February–March 2013: Romania, Serbia, Croatia imported into western Europe – 2013 aflatoxin contamination.
  • February 2013: Iowa contamination.[53]
  • 2014 (ongoing): Nepal and Bangladesh, neonatal exposures, found in umbilical cord blood.[54]
  • 2019 Kenya: five brands of maize flour recalled due to contamination.[55]
  • 2021 USA: Contamination of pet food manufactured by Midwestern Pet Food, causing the deaths of at least 70 dogs.[56]
  • 2021 Sri Lanka: Contaminated Coconut oil released for public consumption by local government.[57]
  • 2024 South Africa: The National Consumer Commission recalled various peanut butter brands due to contamination.[58]

See also edit

Resources edit

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External links edit

  • Aflatoxin, ICRISAT
  • Aflatoxins – Cancer-Causing Substance
  • Aflatoxin B1

aflatoxin, confused, with, alpha, toxin, various, poisonous, carcinogens, mutagens, that, produced, certain, molds, particularly, aspergillus, species, fungi, grow, soil, decaying, vegetation, various, staple, foodstuffs, commodities, such, sweetcorn, wheat, m. Not to be confused with Alpha toxin Aflatoxins are various poisonous carcinogens and mutagens that are produced by certain molds particularly Aspergillus species The fungi grow in soil decaying vegetation and various staple foodstuffs and commodities such as hay sweetcorn wheat millet sorghum cassava rice chili peppers cottonseed peanuts tree nuts sesame seeds sunflower seeds and various spices In short the relevant fungi grow on almost any crop or food When such contaminated food is processed or consumed the aflatoxins enter the general food supply They have been found in both pet and human foods as well as in feedstocks for agricultural animals Animals fed contaminated food can pass aflatoxin transformation products into eggs milk products and meat 1 For example contaminated poultry feed is the suspected source of aflatoxin contaminated chicken meat and eggs in Pakistan 2 Chemical structure of aflatoxin B1Children are particularly affected by aflatoxin exposure which is associated with stunted growth 3 delayed development 4 liver damage and liver cancer An association between childhood stunting and aflatoxin exposure 5 has been reported in some studies 6 7 but could not be detected in all 8 9 Furthermore a causal relationship between childhood stunting and aflatoxin exposure has yet to be conclusively shown by epidemiological studies though such investigations are underway 10 11 12 Adults have a higher tolerance to exposure but are also at risk No animal species is immune Aflatoxins are among the most carcinogenic substances known 13 After entering the body aflatoxins may be metabolized by the liver to a reactive epoxide intermediate or hydroxylated to become the less harmful aflatoxin M1 Aflatoxin poisoning most commonly results from ingestion but the most toxic aflatoxin compound B1 can permeate through the skin 14 The United States Food and Drug Administration FDA action levels for aflatoxin present in food or feed is 20 to 300 ppb 15 The FDA has had occasion to declare both human and pet food recalls as a precautionary measure to prevent exposure The term aflatoxin is derived from the name of the species Aspergillus flavus in which some of the compounds first were discovered The word was coined around 1960 after its discovery as the source of Turkey X disease 16 Aflatoxins form one of the major groupings of mycotoxins and apart from Aspergillus flavus various members of the group of compounds occur in species such as Aspergillus parasiticus Aspergillus pseudocaelatus Aspergillus pseudonomius and Aspergillus nomius 17 Contents 1 Major types and their metabolites 2 Contamination conditions 3 Prevention 4 Pathology 4 1 In other animals 5 Detection in humans 6 List of outbreaks 7 See also 8 Resources 9 External linksMajor types and their metabolites editAflatoxin B1 is considered the most toxic and is produced by both Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus Aflatoxin M1 is present in the fermentation broth of Aspergillus parasiticus but it and aflatoxin M2 are also produced when an infected liver metabolizes aflatoxin B1 and B2 Aflatoxin B1 and B2 AFB produced by Aspergillus flavus and A parasiticus Aflatoxin G1 and G2 AFG produced by some Group II A flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus 18 Aflatoxin M1 AFM1 metabolite of aflatoxin B1 in humans and animals exposure in ng levels may come from a mother s milk Aflatoxin M2 metabolite of aflatoxin B2 in milk of cattle fed on contaminated foods 19 Aflatoxicol AFL metabolite produced by breaking down the lactone ring Aflatoxin Q1 AFQ1 major metabolite of AFB1 in in vitro liver preparations of other higher vertebrates 20 AFM AFQ and AFL retain the possibility to become an epoxide Nevertheless they appear much less capable of causing mutagenesis than the unmetabolized toxin 21 Contamination conditions editAflatoxins are produced by both Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus parasiticus which are common forms of weedy molds widespread in nature The presence of those molds does not always indicate that harmful levels of aflatoxin are present but does indicate a significant risk The molds can colonize and contaminate food before harvest or during storage especially following prolonged exposure to a high humidity environment or to stressful conditions such as drought Aflatoxin contamination is increasing in crops such as maize as a result of climate change creating better conditions for these molds 22 23 The native habitat of Aspergillus is in soil decaying vegetation hay and grains undergoing microbiological deterioration but it invades all types of organic substrates whenever conditions are favorable for its growth Favorable conditions for production of aflatoxins include high moisture content at least 7 and temperatures from 55 F 13 C to 104 F 40 C optimum 27 to 30 C 81 to 86 F 24 25 Aflatoxins have been isolated from all major cereal crops and from sources as diverse as peanut butter and cannabis The staple commodities regularly contaminated with aflatoxins include cassava chilies corn cotton seed millet peanuts rice sorghum sunflower seeds tree nuts wheat and a variety of spices intended for human or animal consumption Aflatoxin transformation products are sometimes found in eggs milk products and meat when animals are fed contaminated grains 1 26 A study conducted in Kenya and Mali found that the predominant practices for drying and storage of maize were inadequate in minimizing exposure to aflatoxins 27 Organic crops which are not treated with fungicides may be more susceptible to contamination with aflatoxins 28 Prevention editA primary means of limiting risk from aflatoxins in the food supply is food hygiene in the commercial commodity supply chain such as rejecting moldy grain for use in food processing plants and testing of batches of ingredients for aflatoxin levels before adding them to the mix Regulatory agencies such as the FDA set limits on acceptable levels Grain drying itself which is necessary for viable combine harvesting in many regions lays the fundamentals for this effort by preventing stored grain from being too damp in the first place There is very limited evidence to show that agricultural and nutritional education can reduce exposure to aflatoxin in low to middle income countries 29 Pathology editNo animal species is known to be immune to the acute toxic effects of aflatoxins Adult humans have a high tolerance for aflatoxin exposure and rarely succumb to acute aflatoxicosis 30 but children are particularly affected and their exposure can lead to stunted growth and delayed development in addition to all the symptoms mentioned below 4 High level aflatoxin exposure produces an acute hepatic necrosis acute aflatoxicosis resulting later in cirrhosis or carcinoma of the liver Acute liver failure is made manifest by bleeding edema alteration in digestion changes to the absorption and or metabolism of nutrients and mental changes and or coma 30 Chronic subclinical exposure does not lead to symptoms so dramatic as acute aflatoxicosis Chronic exposure increases the risk of developing liver and gallbladder cancer 31 as aflatoxin metabolites may intercalate into DNA and alkylate the bases through epoxide moiety This is thought to cause mutations in the p53 gene an important gene in preventing cell cycle progression when there are DNA mutations or signaling apoptosis programmed cell death These mutations seem to affect some base pair locations more than others for example the third base of codon 249 of the p53 gene appears to be more susceptible to aflatoxin mediated mutations than nearby bases 32 As with other DNA alkylating agents Aflatoxin B1 can cause immune suppression and exposure to it is associated with an increased viral load in HIV positive individuals 33 34 The expression of aflatoxin related diseases is influenced by factors such as species age nutrition sex and the possibility of concurrent exposure to other toxins The main target organ in mammals is the liver so aflatoxicosis primarily is a hepatic disease Conditions increasing the likelihood of aflatoxicosis in humans include limited availability of food environmental conditions that favour mould growth on foodstuffs and lack of regulatory systems for aflatoxin monitoring and control 35 A regular diet including apiaceous vegetables such as carrots parsnips celery and parsley may reduce the carcinogenic effects of aflatoxin 36 There is no specific antidote for aflatoxicosis Symptomatic and supportive care tailored to the severity of the liver disease may include intravenous fluids with dextrose active vitamin K B vitamins and a restricted but high quality protein diet with adequate carbohydrate content In other animals edit In dogs aflatoxin has potential to lead to liver disease Low levels of aflatoxin exposure require continuous consumption for several weeks to months in order for signs of liver dysfunction to appear 37 Some articles have suggested the toxic level in dog food is 100 300 ppb and requires continuous exposure or consumption for a few weeks to months to develop aflatoxicosis 38 No information is available to suggest that recovered dogs will later succumb to an aflatoxin induced disease Turkeys are extremely susceptible to aflatoxicosis Recent studies have revealed that this is due to the efficient cytochrome P450 mediated metabolism of aflatoxin B1 in the liver of turkeys and deficient glutathione S transferase mediated detoxification 39 40 Some studies on pregnant hamsters showed a significant relationship between exposure of aflatoxin B1 4 mg kg single dose and the appearance of developmental anomalies in their offspring 41 In 2005 Diamond Pet Foods discovered aflatoxin in a product manufactured at their facility in Gaston South Carolina 42 43 In 23 states Diamond voluntarily recalled 19 products formulated with corn and manufactured in the Gaston facility Testing of more than 2 700 finished product samples conducted by laboratories confirmed that only two date codes of two adult dog formulas had the potential to be toxic 44 In December 2020 and January 2021 Midwestern Pet Foods recalled dog food that contained fatal levels of aflatoxin 45 As many as 70 dogs had died from aflatoxin poisoning by January 12 2021 46 Detection in humans editThere are two principal techniques that have been used most often to detect levels of aflatoxin in humans The first method is measuring the AFB1 guanine adduct in the urine of subjects The presence of this breakdown product indicates exposure to aflatoxin B1 during the past 24 hours This technique measures only recent exposure however Due to the half life of this metabolite the level of AFB1 guanine measured may vary from day to day based on diet it is not ideal for assessing long term exposure Another technique that has been used is a measurement of the AFB1 albumin adduct level in the blood serum This approach provides a more integrated measure of exposure over several weeks or months List of outbreaks editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2014 International sources of commercial peanut butter cooking oils e g olive peanut and sesame oil and cosmetics have been identified as contaminated with aflatoxin 47 48 49 In some instances liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry LC MS MS and other analytical methods revealed a range from 48 to 80 of selected product samples as containing detectable quantities of aflatoxin In many of these contaminated food products the aflatoxin exceeded the safe limits of the U S Food and Drug Administration FDA or other regulatory agency 48 49 50 1973 Poland 10 died following the opening of the Tomb of Casimir IV Jagiellon which contained Aflatoxin producing molds 51 2004 Kenya acute outbreak of aflatoxicosis resulting from ingestion of contaminated maize 125 confirmed deaths 52 February March 2013 Romania Serbia Croatia imported into western Europe 2013 aflatoxin contamination February 2013 Iowa contamination 53 2014 ongoing Nepal and Bangladesh neonatal exposures found in umbilical cord blood 54 2019 Kenya five brands of maize flour recalled due to contamination 55 2021 USA Contamination of pet food manufactured by Midwestern Pet Food causing the deaths of at least 70 dogs 56 2021 Sri Lanka Contaminated Coconut oil released for public consumption by local government 57 2024 South Africa The National Consumer Commission recalled various peanut butter brands due to contamination 58 See also editAflatoxin total synthesis 2013 aflatoxin contamination Mycotoxins in animal feed Sterigmatocystin a related toxin Nixtamalization Other ways in which aspergillus can cause disease in mammals Aspergillosis Primary cutaneous aspergillosisResources edit a b Fratamico PM Bhunia AK Smith JL 2008 Foodborne Pathogens Microbiology and Molecular Biology Norofolk UK Horizon Scientific Press ISBN 978 1 898486 52 7 Iqbal SZ et al 2014 Natural incidence of aflatoxins ochratoxin A and zearalenone in chicken meat and eggs Food Control 43 98 103 doi 10 1016 j foodcont 2014 02 046 Khlangwiset P Shephard GS Wu F October 2011 Aflatoxins and growth impairment a review Critical Reviews in Toxicology 41 9 740 55 doi 10 3109 10408444 2011 575766 PMID 21711088 S2CID 19262759 a b Abbas HK 2005 Aflatoxin and Food Safety CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8247 2303 3 Smith LE Prendergast AJ Turner PC Mbuya MN Mutasa K Kembo G Stoltzfus RJ December 2015 The Potential Role of Mycotoxins as a Contributor to Stunting in the SHINE Trial Clinical Infectious Diseases 61 Suppl 7 S733 7 doi 10 1093 cid civ849 PMC 4657594 PMID 26602301 Voth Gaeddert LE Stoker M Torres O Oerther DB April 2018 Association of aflatoxin exposure and height for age among young children in Guatemala International Journal of Environmental Health Research 28 3 280 292 Bibcode 2018IJEHR 28 280V doi 10 1080 09603123 2018 1468424 PMID 29706087 S2CID 23510545 Turner PC Collinson AC Cheung YB Gong Y Hall AJ Prentice AM Wild CP October 2007 Aflatoxin exposure in utero causes growth faltering in Gambian infants International Journal of Epidemiology 36 5 1119 25 doi 10 1093 ije dym122 PMID 17576701 Mitchell NJ Hsu HH Chandyo RK Shrestha B Bodhidatta L Tu YK Gong YY Egner PA Ulak M Groopman JD Wu F 2017 Aflatoxin exposure during the first 36 months of life was not associated with impaired growth in Nepalese children An extension of the MAL ED study PLOS ONE 12 2 e0172124 Bibcode 2017PLoSO 1272124M doi 10 1371 journal pone 0172124 PMC 5315312 PMID 28212415 Chen C Mitchell NJ Gratz J Houpt ER Gong Y Egner PA Groopman JD Riley RT Showker JL Svensen E Mduma ER Patil CL Wu F March 2018 Exposure to aflatoxin and fumonisin in children at risk for growth impairment in rural Tanzania Environment International 115 29 37 doi 10 1016 j envint 2018 03 001 PMC 5989662 PMID 29544138 Smith LE Prendergast AJ Turner PC Mbuya MN Mutasa K Kembo G Stoltzfus RJ December 2015 The Potential Role of Mycotoxins as a Contributor to Stunting in the SHINE Trial Clinical Infectious Diseases 61 Suppl 7 S733 7 doi 10 1093 cid civ849 PMC 4657594 PMID 26602301 Hoffmann V Jones K Leroy J L 2018 The impact of reducing dietary aflatoxin exposure on child linear growth a cluster randomised controlled trial in Kenya BMJ Global Health 3 6 e000983 doi 10 1136 bmjgh 2018 000983 PMC 6278920 PMID 30588341 Hoffmann V Jones K Leroy J December 2015 Mitigating aflatoxin exposure to improve child growth in Eastern Kenya study protocol for a randomized controlled trial Trials 16 552 doi 10 1186 s13063 015 1064 8 PMC 4669614 PMID 26634701 Hudler GW 1998 Magical Mushrooms Mischievous Molds The Remarkable Story of the Fungus Kingdom and Its Impact on Human Affairs Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 07016 2 Boonen J Malysheva SV Taevernier L Diana Di Mavungu J De Saeger S De Spiegeleer B November 2012 Human skin penetration of selected model mycotoxins Toxicology 301 1 3 21 32 doi 10 1016 j tox 2012 06 012 PMID 22749975 Guidance for Industry Action Levels for Poisonous or Deleterious Substances in Human Food and Animal Feed Food and Drug Administration August 2000 Retrieved November 14 2020 Wannop CC March 1961 The Histopathology of Turkey X Disease in Great Britain Avian Diseases 5 4 371 381 doi 10 2307 1587768 JSTOR 1587768 J Varga J C Frisvad R A Samson Two new aflatoxin producing species and an overview of Aspergillus section Flavi Stud Mycol 2011 Jun 30 69 1 57 80 doi 10 3114 sim 2011 69 05 Geiser DM Dorner JW Horn BW Taylor JW December 2000 The phylogenetics of mycotoxin and sclerotium production in Aspergillus flavus and Aspergillus oryzae Fungal Genetics and Biology 31 3 169 79 doi 10 1006 fgbi 2000 1215 PMID 11273679 Archived from the original on 2021 01 26 Retrieved 2018 12 29 Aflatoxin M2 product page from Fermentek Smith JE Sivewright Henderson R 1991 Mycotoxins and animal foods CRC Press p 614 ISBN 978 0 8493 4904 1 Neal GE Eaton DL Judah DJ Verma A July 1998 Metabolism and toxicity of aflatoxins M1 and B1 in human derived in vitro systems Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 151 1 152 8 doi 10 1006 taap 1998 8440 PMID 9705898 Yu Jina Hennessy David A Tack Jesse Wu Felicia 1 May 2022 Climate change will increase aflatoxin presence in US Corn Environmental Research Letters 17 5 054017 Bibcode 2022ERL 17e4017Y doi 10 1088 1748 9326 ac6435 Battilani P Toscano P Van der Fels Klerx H J Moretti A Camardo Leggieri M Brera C Rortais A Goumperis T Robinson T July 2016 Aflatoxin B1 contamination in maize in Europe increases due to climate change Scientific Reports 6 1 24328 Bibcode 2016NatSR 624328B doi 10 1038 srep24328 PMC 4828719 PMID 27066906 Risk of aflatoxin contamination increases with hot and dry growing conditions Integrated Crop Management crops extension iastate edu Retrieved 2021 06 13 Storing nuts at a low temperature refrigeration reduces aflatoxin levels and mold and yeast counts for 3 6 months News Postharvest Fruits Vegetables and Ornamentals www postharvest biz Retrieved 2021 06 13 Pradeepkiran JA December 2018 Analysis of aflatoxin B1 in contaminated feed media and serum samples of Cyprinus carpio L by high performance liquid chromatography Food Quality and Safety 2 4 199 204 doi 10 1093 fqsafe fyy013 No chance for aflatoxins Archived October 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine Rural 21 the International Journal for Rural Development 3 April 2013 The Aflacontrol project was conducted by IFPRI with scientists from CIMMYT the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics ICRISAT Directorate of Groundnut Research and other organizations It sought to provide evidence of the cost effectiveness of aflatoxin risk reduction strategies along maize and groundnut value chains in Africa and to understand what prevented adoption of these control strategies Tosun H Arslan R 2013 Determination of aflatoxin B1 levels in organic spices and herbs TheScientificWorldJournal 2013 874093 doi 10 1155 2013 874093 PMC 3677655 PMID 23766719 Visser ME Schoonees A Ezekiel CN Randall NP Naude CE April 2020 Agricultural and nutritional education interventions for reducing aflatoxin exposure to improve infant and child growth in low and middle income countries The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2020 4 CD013376 doi 10 1002 14651858 cd013376 pub2 PMC 7141997 PMID 32270495 a b Williams JH Phillips TD Jolly PE Stiles JK Jolly CM Aggarwal D November 2004 Human aflatoxicosis in developing countries a review of toxicology exposure potential health consequences and interventions The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 80 5 1106 22 doi 10 1093 ajcn 80 5 1106 PMID 15531656 Nogueira L Foerster C Groopman J Egner P Koshiol J Ferreccio C May 2015 Association of aflatoxin with gallbladder cancer in Chile JAMA 313 20 2075 7 doi 10 1001 jama 2015 4559 PMC 7169945 PMID 26010638 Aguilar F Hussain SP Cerutti P September 1993 Aflatoxin B1 induces the transversion of G gt T in codon 249 of the p53 tumor suppressor gene in human hepatocytes Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 90 18 8586 90 Bibcode 1993PNAS 90 8586A doi 10 1073 pnas 90 18 8586 PMC 47402 PMID 8397412 Jolly PE Inusah S Lu B Ellis WO Nyarko A Phillips TD Williams JH 2013 Association between high aflatoxin B1 levels and high viral load in HIV positive people World Mycotoxin Journal 6 3 255 261 doi 10 3920 WMJ2013 1585 PMC 6750767 PMID 31534557 Common food fungus can accelerate onset of AIDS digitaljournal com September 1 2013 Machida M Gomi K eds 2010 Aspergillus Molecular Biology and Genomics Caister Academic Press ISBN 978 1 904455 53 0 Peterson S Lampe JW Bammler TK Gross Steinmeyer K Eaton DL September 2006 Apiaceous vegetable constituents inhibit human cytochrome P 450 1A2 hCYP1A2 activity and hCYP1A2 mediated mutagenicity of aflatoxin B1 Food and Chemical Toxicology 44 9 1474 84 doi 10 1016 j fct 2006 04 010 PMID 16762476 Bingham AK Phillips TD Bauer JE March 2003 Potential for dietary protection against the effects of aflatoxins in animals Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association 222 5 591 6 doi 10 2460 javma 2003 222 591 PMID 12619837 Bastianello SS Nesbit JW Williams MC Lange AL December 1987 Pathological findings in a natural outbreak of aflatoxicosis in dogs The Onderstepoort Journal of Veterinary Research 54 4 635 40 PMID 3444619 Rawal S Yip SS Coulombe RA August 2010 Cloning expression and functional characterization of cytochrome P450 3A37 from turkey liver with high aflatoxin B1 epoxidation activity Chemical Research in Toxicology 23 8 1322 9 doi 10 1021 tx1000267 PMID 20707407 Rawal S Coulombe RA August 2011 Metabolism of aflatoxin B1 in turkey liver microsomes the relative roles of cytochromes P450 1A5 and 3A37 Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology 254 3 349 54 doi 10 1016 j taap 2011 05 010 PMID 21616088 Goldblatt L 2012 12 02 Aflatoxin Scientific Background Control and Implications Elsevier ISBN 9780323148498 FDA Inspection Report Diamond Gaston SC Plant 12 21 2005 1 19 2006 2005 Recall FDA AKC Standard Article Contaminated Diamond Pet Food Products and Best By Dates Narrowed Akcstandard com Archived July 7 2011 at the Wayback Machine Medicine Center for Veterinary 2021 01 12 FDA Alert Certain Lots of Sportmix Pet Food Recalled for Potentially Fatal Levels of Aflatoxin FDA Tyko Kelly Dog food recall expands More than 70 dogs have died and 80 pets sick after eating Sportsmix pet food USA TODAY Retrieved 2021 01 13 Bao L Trucksess MW White KD 2010 Determination of aflatoxins B1 B2 G1 and G2 in olive oil peanut oil and sesame oil Journal of AOAC International 93 3 936 42 doi 10 1093 jaoac 93 3 936 PMID 20629398 a b Li FQ Li YW Wang YR Luo XY May 2009 Natural occurrence of aflatoxins in Chinese peanut butter and sesame paste Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 57 9 3519 24 doi 10 1021 jf804055n PMID 19338351 a b Mahoney N Molyneux RJ April 2010 Rapid analytical method for the determination of aflatoxins in plant derived dietary supplement and cosmetic oils Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry 58 7 4065 70 doi 10 1021 jf9039028 PMC 2858461 PMID 20235534 Leong YH Ismail N Latiff AA Manaf NA Rosma A 1 January 2011 Determination of aflatoxins in commercial nuts and nut products using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry World Mycotoxin Journal 4 2 119 127 doi 10 3920 WMJ2010 1229 Staff 19 May 2014 Gdy otwarto grob krolewski zaczela dzialac klatwa Jagiellonczyka When the royal tomb was opened the Jagiellon curse began its work Gazeta Krakowska Retrieved 18 January 2023 Probst Claudia Njapau Henry Cotty Peter J 2007 04 15 Outbreak of an Acute Aflatoxicosis in Kenya in 2004 Identification of the Causal Agent Applied and Environmental Microbiology 73 8 2762 2764 Bibcode 2007ApEnM 73 2762P doi 10 1128 AEM 02370 06 ISSN 0099 2240 PMC 1855601 PMID 17308181 Dog food recall underscores toxic danger in drought hit U S corn Reuters February 25 2013 Aflatoxin threat in Nepal Bangladesh SciDev Net South Asia 2014 12 17 Archived from the original on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2016 10 17 Mutahi B 2019 11 15 How safe is Kenya s staple food Retrieved 2019 11 15 US pet food recalled after 70 dogs die and others fall sick BBC News 2021 01 14 Retrieved 2021 01 14 Coconut oil stocks containing aflatoxins in market themorning lk 2021 03 26 Retrieved 2021 03 26 https businesstech co za news lifestyle 750776 why theres a major peanut butter recall in south africa 12 Feb 2024 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help External links edit nbsp Look up aflatoxin in Wiktionary the free dictionary Detailed listing and information on all Aspergillus mycotoxins Aflatoxin ICRISAT Aspergillusflavus org Aflatoxins Cancer Causing Substance Aflatoxin B1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Aflatoxin amp oldid 1207101573, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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