Affiliation:
1. Faculty of Technology, Food Microbiology, Novi Sad
Abstract
The growth of fungi on food causes physical and chemical changes which,
further affect negatively the sensory and nutritive quality of food. Species
from genera: Aspergillus, Penicillium, Fusarium, Alternari?, Cladosporium,
Mucor, Rhizopus, Eurotium and Emericella are usually found. Some of them are
potentially dangerous for humans and animals, due to possible synthesis and
excretion of toxic secondary metabolites - mycotoxins into the food. Their
toxic syndroms in animals and humans are known as mycotoxicoses. The
pathologic changes can be observed in parenhimatic organs, and in bones and
central nervous system also. Specific conditions are necessary for mycotoxin
producing fungi to synthetize sufficient quantities of these compounds for
demonstration of biologic effects. The main biochemical paths in the
formation of mycotoxins include the polyketide (aflatoxins, sterigmatocystin,
zearalenone, citrinine, patulin), terpenic (trichothecenes), aminoacid
(glicotoxins, ergotamines, sporidesmin, malformin C), and carbonic acids path
(rubratoxins). Aflatoxins are the most toxigenic metabolites of fungi,
produced mostly by Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus species. Aflatoxins
appear more frequently in food in the tropic and subtropic regions, while the
food in Europe is more exposed to also very toxic ochratoxin A producing
fungi (A. ochraceus and some Penicillium species). The agricultural products
can be contaminated by fungi both before and after the harvest. The primary
mycotoxicoses in humans are the result of direct intake of vegetable products
contaminated by mycotoxins, while the secondary mycotoxicoses are caused by
products of animal origin. The risk of the presence of fungi and mycotoxin in
food is increasing, having in mind that some of them are highly
thermoresistent, and the temperatures of usual food sterilization is not
sufficient for their termination. The paper presents the review of most
important mycotoxins, their biologic effects, the condition of their
synthesis, occurence in food, permitted tolerant intake, as well as the
possibility of their degradation.
Funder
Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Subject
General Chemical Engineering,General Chemistry