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1.
Effect of Diurnal Temperature Cycles on the Production of Aflatoxin   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Exposures to short periods of high temperature (40 to 50 C) in each 24-hr diurnal temperature cycle (average temperature ca. 25 C) reduced growth of Aspergillus parasiticus and production and accumulation of the aflatoxins when compared with cultures held continuously at 25 C. In contrast, diurnal cycles with an average temperature of ca. 25 C but with minima as low as 10 C did not appreciably affect either growth or toxin production. The ratio of production of aflatoxin B to aflatoxin G increased as the maximal temperature was raised but remained essentially unchanged with decreasing minimal temperatures.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of temperature cycling on the relative productions of aflatoxins B1 and G1 by Aspergillus parasiticus NRRL 2999 was studied. The cycling of temperature between 33 and 15 degrees C favored aflatoxin B1 accumulation, whereas cycling between 35 and 15 degrees C favored aflatoxin G1 production. Cultures subjected to temperature cycling between 33 and 25 degrees C at various time intervals changed the relative productions of aflatoxins B1 and G1 drastically. Results obtained with temperature cycling and yeast extract-sucrose medium with ethoxyquin to decrease aflatoxin G1 production suggest that the enzyme system responsible for the conversion of aflatoxin B1 to G1 might be more efficient at 25 degrees C than at 33 degrees C. The possible explanation of the effect of both constant and cycling temperatures on the relative accumulations of aflatoxins B1 and G2 might be through the control of the above enzyme system. The study also showed that greater than 57% of aflatoxin B1, greater than 47% of aflatoxin G1, and greater than 50% of total aflatoxins (B1 plus G1) were in the mycelium by day 10 under both constant and cyclic temperature conditions.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of continuous light and continuous darkness on the growth of Aspergillus parasiticus and on the production of aflatoxin, averufin, versicolorin A, and versicolorin C by Aspergillus parasiticus were determined at six different temperatures with six replicates for each experiment. No growth was observed at 15 degrees C in the light, although slight growth was observed at this temperature in the dark. No aflatoxins or anthraquinones were produced in the light or dark at 35 and 40 degrees C, although growth was good at these temperatures. Differences in aflatoxins and anthraquinones for cultures grown in light and in dark were consistent at each temperature. Higher mean quantities of these secondary metabolites were produced in the light at 20 and 25 degrees C; lower mean quantities were produced in the light at 30 degrees C. The ranges of values overlapped considerably, but in all cases the differences between temperatures were significant.  相似文献   

4.
Two aflatoxin-producing isolates of Aspergillus flavus were grown for 5 days on Wort media at 2, 7, 13, 18, 24, 29, 35, 41, 46, and 52 C. Maximal production of aflatoxins occurred at 24 C. Maximal growth of A. flavus isolates occurred at 29 and 35 C. The ratio of the production of aflatoxin B1 to aflatoxin G1 varied with temperature. Aflatoxin production was not related to growth rate of A. flavus; one isolate at 41 C, at almost maximal growth of A. flavus, produced no aflatoxins. At 5 days, no aflatoxins were produced at temperatures lower than 18 C or higher than 35 C. Color of CHCl3 extracts appeared to be directly correlated with aflatoxin concentrations. A. flavus isolates grown at 2, 7, and 41 C for 12 weeks produced no aflatoxins. At 13 C, both isolates produced aflatoxins in 3 weeks, and one isolate produced increasing amounts with time. The second isolate produced increasing amounts through 6 weeks, but at 12 weeks smaller amounts of aflatoxins were recovered than at 6 weeks.  相似文献   

5.
Aflatoxin Production in Meats. I. Stored Meats   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Aflatoxins were produced on fresh beef (in which bacterial spoilage was delayed with antibiotics), ham, and bacon inoculated with toxinogenic fungi and stored at 15, 20 and 30 C. Meats stored at 10 C were spoiled by bacteria and yeast before detectable levels of aflatoxins were produced. High levels of aflatoxins were formed in meats stored at 20 C; one sample supported the production of 630 mug of aflatoxins per g of meat, the major portion (580 mug) of which was aflatoxin G(1). Meats stored below 30 C developed higher levels of aflatoxin G(1) than B(1), but at 30 C Aspergillus flavus produced equal amounts of B(1) and G(1), whereas A. parasiticus continued to produce more G(1) than B(1).  相似文献   

6.
Samples of freshly harvested and remoistened corn, of various moisture contents, were stored at different temperatures; analyses for aflatoxin content were made periodically. At moisture levels above 17.5% and at temperatures of 24 C or warmer, aflatoxins were formed by Aspergillus flavus present in the original epiphytic mycoflora. Remoistened dried corn was subject to more rapid fungal deterioration and aflatoxin formation than freshly harvested corn. Screening of the fungi present in the corn revealed aflatoxin production only by A. flavus. The toxigenic strains produced only aflatoxins B(1) and B(2).  相似文献   

7.
Summary The effect of temperature on formation of aflatoxin on solid substrate (rice) byAspergillus flavus NRRL 2999 has been studied in some detail. The optimum temperature for production of both aflatoxin B1 and G1 under the conditions employed is 28° C. Comparable yields of B1 were obtained at 32° C, but considerably less G1 was produced at this temperature. Both B1 and G1 were found in lesser amounts at temperatures above 32° C, and the aflatoxin content of rice incubated at 37° C was low (300–700 ppb) even though growth was good.Reducing the temperature from 28° to 15° C resulted in progressively less aflatoxin, but 100 ppb of B1 was detected in cultures incubated 3 weeks at 11° C. No aflatoxin was produced at 8° C.The ratio of the four aflatoxins is affected by temperature. At the lower temperatures, essentially equal amounts of aflatoxin B1 and G1 were produced, whereas at 28° C, approximately four times as much B1 was detected as G1. At the higher temperatures, relatively less G was formed, until at 37° C, less than 10 ppb was detected.This is a laboratory of the Northern Utilization Research and Development Division, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture.  相似文献   

8.
An isolate of Aspergillus parasiticus CP461 (SRRC 2043) produced no detectable aflatoxins, but accumulated O-methylsterigmatocystin (OMST). When sterigmatocystin (ST) was fed to this isolate in a low-sugar medium, there was an increase in the accumulation of OMST, without aflatoxin synthesis. When radiolabeled [14C]OMST was fed to resting mycelia of a non-aflatoxin-, non-ST-, and non-OMST-producing mutant of A. parasiticus AVN-1 (SRRC 163), 14C-labeled aflatoxins B1 and G1 were produced; 10 nmol of OMST produced 7.8 nmol of B1 and 1.0 nmol of G1, while 10 nmol of ST produced 6.4 nmol of B1 and 0.6 nmol of G1. A time course study of aflatoxin synthesis in ST feeding experiments with AVN-1 revealed that OMST is synthesized by the mold during the onset of aflatoxin synthesis. The total amount of aflatoxins recovered from OMST feeding experiments was higher than from experiments in which ST was fed to the resting mycelia. These results suggest that OMST is a true metabolite in the aflatoxin biosynthetic pathway between sterigmatocystin and aflatoxins B1 and G1 and is not a shunt metabolite, as thought previously.  相似文献   

9.
Vector abundance is an important factor governing disease risk and is often employed when modelling disease transmission. The longevity of the aquatic stages of mosquitoes (Diptera: Culicidae) dictates the rate of production of adults and hence the intensity of disease transmission. We examined how temperature influences the survival of larval stages (larvae and pupae) of Anopheles gambiae Giles sensu stricto and subsequent adult production of this most efficient malaria vector. Groups of 30 mosquitoes were reared at constant temperatures (from 10 to 40 degrees C) from the first instar and observed until death or metamorphosis of the last individual. Larvae developed into adults at temperatures ranging from 16 to 34 degrees C. Larval survival was shortest (< 7 days) at 10-12 degrees C and 38-40 degrees C, and longest (> 30 days) at 14-20 degrees C. Within the temperature range at which adults were produced, larval mortality was highest at the upper range 30-32 degrees C, with death (rather than adult emergence) representing over 70% of the terminal events. The optimal survival temperatures were lower than the temperatures at which development was quickest, suggesting a critical relationship between temperature and the life cycle of the insect. These data provide fundamental information about An. gambiae s.s. adult productivity at different temperatures, which may facilitate the construction of process-based models of malaria risk in Africa and the development of early warning systems for epidemics.  相似文献   

10.
A method has been developed for the production of aflatoxin by growing Aspergillus flavus NRRL 3145 on solid substrate wheat. Optimal yields of 900 mug of aflatoxin G(1) and 900 mug of aflatoxin B(1) per g of substrate were obtained in 4 to 5 days at 28 C. A study of aflatoxin production on hulls and groats of oats and on whole oats by A. flavus strains NRRL 2999, NRRL 3000, and NRRL 3145 revealed that aflatoxin was produced on all three substrates, although production was very slight on hulls. Strain NRRL 3145 grown on solid substrate groats produced the largest amounts of aflatoxin: 580 mug of B(1) and 450 mug of G(1) per g of substrate. A densitometric method for reading thin-layer chromatographic plates is described; this is more objective and more accurate than the visual methods previously used for the determination of all four aflatoxins.  相似文献   

11.
Aims: This study was conducted to characterize the growth of and aflatoxin production by Aspergillus flavus on paddy and to develop kinetic models describing the growth rate as a function of water activity (aw) and temperature. Methods and Results: The growth of A. flavus on paddy and aflatoxin production were studied following a full factorial design with seven aw levels within the range of 0·82–0·99 and seven temperatures between 10 and 43°C. The growth of the fungi, expressed as colony diameter (mm), was measured daily, and the aflatoxins were analysed using HPLC with a fluorescence detector. The maximum colony growth rates of both isolates were estimated by fitting the primary model of Baranyi to growth data. Three potentially suitable secondary models, Rosso, polynomial and Davey, were assessed for their ability to describe the radial growth rate as a function of temperature and aw. Both strains failed to grow at the marginal temperatures (10 and 43°C), regardless of the aw studied, and at the aw level of 0·82, regardless of temperature. Despite that the predictions of all studied models showed good agreement with the observed growth rates, Davey model proved to be the best predictor of the experimental data. The cardinal parameters as estimated by Rosso model were comparable to those reported in previous studies. Toxins were detected in the range of 0·86–0·99 aw with optimal aw of 0·98 and optimal temperature in the range of 25–30°C. Conclusions: The influences of aw and temperature on the growth of A. flavus and aflatoxin production were successfully characterized, and the models developed were found to be capable of providing good, related estimates of the growth rates. Significance and Impact of the Study: The results of this study could be effectively implemented in minimizing the risk of aflatoxin contamination of the paddy at postharvest.  相似文献   

12.
Experimental short time production of aflatoxins in mixed feeds at 22, 28 and 37 °C as related to various moisture contents was studied. Growth of Aspergillus parasiticus was not observed in the meals with a moisture content ranging around 15% (22, 28 and 37 °C); the lowest quantifiable total aflatoxins at the fourth day was detected at 22 °C with 19.4% of moisture content; the higher total quantity of aflatoxins (113 mg/kg) was produced at 28 °C with 29.3% of moisture content. The ratio aflatoxin B1/aflatoxin G1 increased as the temperature raised.  相似文献   

13.
Fourteen isolates of Aspergillus parasiticus and 2 isolates of Aspergillus flavus isolated from the mealybug Saccharicoccus sacchari were analyzed for production of aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, and G2 in liquid culture over a 20-day period. Twelve Aspergillus isolates including 11 A. parasiticus and 1 A. flavus produced aflatoxins which were extracted from both the mycelium and culture filtrate. Aflatoxin production was detected at day 3 and was detected continually for up to day 20. Aflatoxin B1 production was greatest between 7 and 10 days and significantly higher quantities were produced by A. flavus compared to A. parasiticus. Aflatoxin production was not a stable trait in 1 A. parasiticus isolate passaged 50 times on agar. In addition to loss of aflatoxin production, an associated loss in sporulation ability was also observed in this passaged isolate, although it did maintain pathogenicity against S. sacchari. An aflatoxin B1 concentration of 0.16 micrograms/mealybug (14.2 micrograms/g wet wt) was detected within the tissues of infected mealybugs 7 days after inoculation. In conclusion, the ability of Aspergillus isolates to produce aflatoxins was not essential to the entomopathogenic activity of this fungus against its host S. sacchari.  相似文献   

14.
Aflatoxin B1 permeates isolated rat hepatocytes by non-ionic diffusion. Its uptake is neither saturable nor influenced by metabolic energy and not inhibited by treatment of cells with proteases. The initial rate of aflatoxin B1 uptake measured at 7 degrees C is between 40 and 50% compared to that at 37 degrees C. However, after an incubation period of 7 minutes identical equilibrium uptake is reached at both temperatures. The apparent activation energies, calculated for aflatoxin B1 uptake by Arrhenius diagrams ranged between 1.69 and 4.5 kcal/mol. A Q10 value of 1.34 was calculated for a temperature interval of 7-17 degrees C but decreased to 1.05 for the interval of 27-37 degrees C. Liposomes or lipoproteins added to the cell suspension inhibited the aflatoxin B1 uptake into hepatocytes. Liposomes mainly composed of unsaturated fatty acids bind twice as much aflatoxin B1 as those composed of saturated ones, indicating that the lipophilicity of the mycotoxin is crucial in the determination of its uptake into liver cells. At concentrations above 5 micrograms/ml, aflatoxin B1 inhibited the carrier-mediated uptake of cholic acid and of phalloidin into hepatocytes. This effect was reversible and abolished by washing the cells after preincubation with aflatoxin. In concentrations below 5 micrograms/ml the uptake of phallotoxin and cholic acid was however stimulated by 15-25%. These results indicate, that a carrier-mediated uptake into hepatocytes via the multispecific bile salt transporter is not responsible for the organoselective clearance of aflatoxins by the liver. On the other hand, the cholestatic effect of aflatoxin B1 results at least partially from the inhibition of the multispecific bile acid transport system. This inhibition may arise from affinity of aflatoxins to lipid domains of the cell membrane.  相似文献   

15.
N Uraih  J R Chipley 《Microbios》1976,17(67):51-59
The effects of sodium chloride, sodium acetate, benzoic acid, sodium benzoate, malonic acid, and sodium malonate on growth and aflatoxin production by Aspergillus flavus were investigated in synthetic media. Sodium chloride at concentrations equivalent to or greater than 12 g/100 ml inhibited growth and aflatoxin production, while at 8 g or less/100 ml, growth and aflatoxin production were stimulated. At 2 g or less/100 ml, sodium acetate also stimulated growth and aflatoxin production, but reduction occurred with 4 g or more/100 ml. Malonic acid at 10, 20, 40, and 50 mM reduced growth and aflatoxin production (over 50%) while sodium malonate at similar concentrations but different pH values had the opposite effect. Benzoic acid (pH 3.9) and sodium benzoate (pH 5.0) at 0.4 g/100 ml completely inhibited growth and aflatoxin production. Examination of the effect of initial pH indicated that the extent of inhibitory action of malonic acid and sodium acetate was a function of initial pH. The inhibitory action of benzoic acid and sodium benzoate appeared to be a function of undissociated benzoic acid molecules. Aflatoxin reduction was usually accompanied by an unidentified orange pigment, while aflatoxin stimulation was accompanied by unidentified blue and green fluorescent spots but with lower Rf values that aflatoxins B1, G1, B2, and G2 standards.  相似文献   

16.
The potential of sodium bicarbonate to inhibit growth of and aflatoxin synthesis by Aspergillus parasiticus was examined in Czapek's agar (CA), a medium in which fluorescence under UV light indicates aflatoxin production. Incorporation of sodium bicarbonate (SB) into CA at 0.011, 0.022, and 0.033 mol% reduced cell viability 63-, 10(3)-, and greater than 10(7)-fold, respectively. Colonies resulting from surviving cells did not fluoresce under UV light, but thin-layer chromatography analysis of culture extracts detected aflatoxins. Potassium bicarbonate (KB) at 0.011 and 0.022 mol% produced inhibitory effects similar to those of SB, but NaCl and silica had no effect. After 7 days, control cultures had the normal aflatoxin distribution (B1 greater than G1 greater than B2 greater than G2), but this distribution shifted to B2 greater than B1 approximately equal to G2 greater than G1 during prolonged incubation. Cultures supplemented with SB and KB contained mostly aflatoxins B1 and G1 after 28 days. Both SB and KB raised the pH of CA to 7.5 to 8.5 at the time of growth. Culture growth on CA adjusted to pH 7.5 to 8.5 with NaOH was not inhibited but exhibited reduced fluorescence and elevated levels of aflatoxins B1 and G1. Thus, while bicarbonate inhibition of growth could not be attributed to pH elevation, the lack of culture fluorescence on CA-SB and CA-KB and the altered aflatoxin distribution were caused by the ability of SB and KB to elevate pH.  相似文献   

17.
The potential of sodium bicarbonate to inhibit growth of and aflatoxin synthesis by Aspergillus parasiticus was examined in Czapek's agar (CA), a medium in which fluorescence under UV light indicates aflatoxin production. Incorporation of sodium bicarbonate (SB) into CA at 0.011, 0.022, and 0.033 mol% reduced cell viability 63-, 10(3)-, and greater than 10(7)-fold, respectively. Colonies resulting from surviving cells did not fluoresce under UV light, but thin-layer chromatography analysis of culture extracts detected aflatoxins. Potassium bicarbonate (KB) at 0.011 and 0.022 mol% produced inhibitory effects similar to those of SB, but NaCl and silica had no effect. After 7 days, control cultures had the normal aflatoxin distribution (B1 greater than G1 greater than B2 greater than G2), but this distribution shifted to B2 greater than B1 approximately equal to G2 greater than G1 during prolonged incubation. Cultures supplemented with SB and KB contained mostly aflatoxins B1 and G1 after 28 days. Both SB and KB raised the pH of CA to 7.5 to 8.5 at the time of growth. Culture growth on CA adjusted to pH 7.5 to 8.5 with NaOH was not inhibited but exhibited reduced fluorescence and elevated levels of aflatoxins B1 and G1. Thus, while bicarbonate inhibition of growth could not be attributed to pH elevation, the lack of culture fluorescence on CA-SB and CA-KB and the altered aflatoxin distribution were caused by the ability of SB and KB to elevate pH.  相似文献   

18.
Groundnut samples, collected soon after harvest, from different districts in the irrigated region (Central Sudan) were free from aflatoxins with the method used. Samples collected from the rainfed region (Western Sudan) showed variable levels of aflatoxin ranging from 100% sample contamination in El Hamdi to only 10% in Casgeal.Damaged pods were highly contaminated with A. flavus and accumulated large amounts of aflatoxins. However, sound intact pods, recorded lower fungal contamination and were almost free of aflatoxins. Groundnut products collected from Khartoum North (Bahri) have higher levels of aflatoxins than those collected from Khartoum and Umdorman. Gray and red roasted pods showed higher amounts of aflatoxins, while the groundnut paste was the least contaminated.None of the three varieties of groundnuts tested in this work was completely resistant to aflatoxin production. A temperature of 30°C and 86.3% relative humidy (RH) are the optimum conditions for both A. flavus growth and aflatoxin production in groundnuts.  相似文献   

19.
Sharma YP  Sumbali G 《Mycopathologia》1999,148(2):103-107
An investigation was undertaken to obtain data on the occurrence of aflatoxins and the aflatoxin producing potential of Aspergillus flavus strains isolated from dry fruit slices of quinces produced in jammu and Kashmir, India. A total of 147 A. flavus isolates recovered from dr fruit slices were grown in liquid rice flour medium and screened for the production of various aflatoxins by thin layer chromatography. The results showed that 23.14% of the tested isolates were aflatoxigenic, producing aflatoxins B1 and B2 in varying amounts. Aflatoxins G1 and G2 were not detected. All 25 of the investigated market samples were also found to be aflatoxin B1 positive and the level of contamination ranged from 96 to 8164 micrograms/kg of the dry fruit which is quite high in comparison to the permissible level of 30 ppb. As per these results biochemical composition of dry fruit slices of quinces, along with climatic conditions seem to be very favourable for aflatoxin production by the toxigenic A. flavus strains. Therefore, monitoring of aflatoxins in dry fruit slices of quinces is recommended for this region.  相似文献   

20.
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