Cowpeas as growth substrate do not support the production of aflatoxin byAspergillus sp |
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Authors: | P. A. Houssou M. Schmidt-Heydt R. Geisen P. Fandohan B. C. Ahohuendo D. J. Hounhouigan M. Jakobsen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Programme de Technologies Agricoles et Alimentaires/Institut National des Recherches Agricoles du Bénin, P.O. Box 128, Porto-Novo, Bénin 2. Max Rubner Institute - Federal Research Institute for Nutrition and Food, Institute of Safety and Quality of Fruits and Vegetables, Haid-und-Neu-Str. 9, 76133, Karlsruhe, Germany 3. Faculté des Sciences Agronomiques, Université d’Abomey-Calavi, 01 BP 526, Cotonou, Bénin 4. Food Microbiology Department, Faculty of Life Science, University of Copenhagen, Rolighedsvej 30, 1958, Frederiksberg C, Denmark
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Abstract: | A number of 21Aspergillus sp. strains isolated from cowpeas from Benin (Africa) were characterized by RAPD methodology. Seven of these strains grouped withA. flavus in the dendrogram generated with the RAPD data. Only three were able to produce aflatoxin in significant amounts. Twelve other isolates grouped withA. parasiticus. All of these strains except 3 produced aflatoxin. Two additional strains neither fit with theA. flavus group, nor theA. parasiticus group according to their RAPD pattern. Both did not produce aflatoxin in measurable amounts. Generally the aflatoxin positive strains produced high amounts of aflatoxin after growth on YES medium. However after growth on cowpea based medium aflatoxin biosynthesis was strongly ceased, albeit the growth of the colony was only partly reduced. This was true for media made either with the whole cowpea seed or with cowpea seed without seed coat. Interestingly when the cowpea medium was heat sterilized the fungus was able to produce high amounts of aflatoxin. This, however, was not the case after the use of gamma irradiation as sterilization method for the medium. The expression of thenor- 1 gene, which is one of the early genes involved in aflatoxin biosynthesis, was significantly repressed after growth on gamma irradiated cowpea medium in contrast to YES medium. This study was part of the project “Capability Building for Research and Quality Assurance in Traditional Food Processing in West Africa” |
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Keywords: | cowpea aflatoxin inhibitory substances RAPD |
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