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Research Publications (Food Safety)

This page tracks research articles published in national and international peer-reviewed journals. Recent articles are available ahead of print and searchable by Journal, Article Title, and Category. Research publications are tracked across six categories: Bacterial Pathogens, Chemical Contaminants, Natural Toxins, Parasites, Produce Safety, and Viruses. Articles produced by USDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) and FDA Grant Funding Agencies (requires login) are also tracked in Scopus.

Displaying 1301 - 1325 of 2013

  1. Efficacy of a Yeast Cell Wall Extract to Mitigate the Effect of Naturally Co-Occurring Mycotoxins Contaminating Feed Ingredients Fed to Young Pigs: Impact on Gut Health, Microbiome, and Growth

    • Toxins
    • Mycotoxins are produced by fungi and are potentially toxic to pigs. Yeast cell wall extract (YCWE) is known to adsorb mycotoxins and improve gut health in pigs. One hundred and twenty growing (56 kg; experiment 1) and 48 nursery piglets (6 kg; experiment 2) were assigned to four dietary treatments in a 2 × 2 factorial design for 35 and 48 days, respectively.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
      • Natural toxins
  2. Determination of Aflatoxin B1 and B2 in Vegetable Oils Using Fe3O4/rGO Magnetic Solid Phase Extraction Coupled with High-Performance Liquid Chromatography Fluorescence with Post-Column Photochemical Derivatization

    • Toxins
    • In this study, magnetic graphene nanocomposite Fe3O4/rGO was synthesized by facile one-pot solvothermal method. The nanocomposite was successfully used as magnetic solid phase extraction (MSPE) adsorbents for the determination of aflatoxins in edible vegetable oils through the π–π stacking interactions. MSPE parameters including the amount of adsorbents, extraction and desorption time, washing conditions, and the type and volume of desorption solvent were optimized.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  3. Carbon dioxide production as an indicator of Aspergillus flavus colonisation and aflatoxins/cyclopiazonic acid contamination in shelled peanuts stored under different interacting abiotic factors

    • Fungal Biology
    • Author(s): E. Garcia-Cela, F.J. Gari Sanchez, M. Sulyok, C. Verheecke-Vaessen, A. Medina, R. Kruska, N. Magan

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  4. Development of a rapid multi-mycotoxin LC-MS/MS stable isotope dilution analysis for grain legumes and its application on 66 market samples

    • Food Control
    • Author(s): Birgitta Maria Kunz, Felicitas Wanko, Sabine Kemmlein, Arnold Bahlmann, Sascha Rohn, Ronald Maul

      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
      • Natural toxins
  5. Toxicopathological effects of feeding aflatoxins B1 in broilers and its ameliosration with indigenous mycotoxin binder

    • Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
    • Author(s): M. Kashif Saleemi, Kamran Ashraf, S. Tehseen Gul, M. Noman Naseem, M. Sohail Sajid, Mashkoor Mohsin, Cheng He, Muhammad Zubair, Ahrar Khan

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  6. A facile one-pot green synthesis of β-cyclodextrin decorated porous graphene nanohybrid as a highly efficient adsorbent for extracting aflatoxins from maize and animal feeds

    • Food Chemistry
    • Author(s): Najmeh Sheibani Tezerji, Mohammad Mehdi Foroughi, Rasoul Rezaei Bezenjani, Nezhat Jandaghi, Ebrahim Rezaeipour, Forogh Rezvani

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  7. Degradation of Aflatoxin B1 and Zearalenone by Bacterial and Fungal Laccases in Presence of Structurally Defined Chemicals and Complex Natural Mediators

    • Toxins
    • Aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) and zearalenone (ZEN) exert deleterious effects to human and animal health. In this study, the ability of a CotA laccase from Bacillus subtilis (BsCotA) to degrade these two mycotoxins was first investigated. Among the nine structurally defined chemical compounds, methyl syringate was the most efficient mediator assisting BsCotA to degrade AFB1 (98.0%) and ZEN (100.0%).

      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
      • Natural toxins
  8. Dual culture of atoxigenic and toxigenic strains of Aspergillus flavus to gain insight into repression of aflatoxin biosynthesis and fungal interaction

    • Mycotoxin Research
    • Application of atoxigenic strains to compete against toxigenic strains of Aspergillus flavus strains has emerged as one of the practical strategies for reducing aflatoxin contamination in corn, peanut, and tree nuts. The actual mechanism that results in aflatoxin reduction is not fully understood. Real-time RT-PCR and relative quantification of gene expression protocol were applied to elucidate the molecular mechanism.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  9. Natural occurrence of mycotoxins in maize and sorghum in Togo

    • Mycotoxin Research
    • Mycotoxins are fungal secondary metabolites frequently affecting agronomical crops and consequently imposing a major challenge for food safety and public health. In this study, a total of 67 raw cereals (55 maize and 12 sorghum) were collected from the market of Togo. The samples were investigated on the occurrence of 21 mycotoxins using state-of-the-art high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS).

      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
      • Natural toxins
  10. Oxidative DNA damage and multi-organ pathologies in male mice subchronically treated with aflatoxin B1

    • Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety
    • Author(s): Hongyuan Zhou, Jiaman Wang, Liang Ma, Lu Chen, Ting Guo, Yuhao Zhang, Hongjie Dai, Yong Yu

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  11. Calcination Enhances the Aflatoxin and Zearalenone Binding Efficiency of a Tunisian Clay

    • Toxins
    • Clays are known to have promising adsorbing characteristics, and are used as feed additives to overcome the negative effects of mycotoxicosis in livestock farming. Modification of clay minerals by heat treatment, also called calcination, can alter their adsorption characteristics. Little information, however, is available on the effect of calcination with respect to mycotoxin binding.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
      • Natural toxins
  12. Aflatoxin M1 contamination level in Iranian milk and dairy products: a systematic review and meta-analysis

    • World Mycotoxin Journal
      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  13. Lysine acetylation contributes todevelopment, aflatoxin biosynthesis and pathogenicity in Aspergillus flavus

    • Environmental Microbiology
    • Aspergillus flavus (A. flavus) is a pathogenic fungus that produces carcinogenic aflatoxins, posing a great threat to crops, animals and humans. Lysine acetylation is one of the most important reversible post‐translational modifications, and plays a vital regulatory role in various cellular processes. However, current information on the extent and function of lysine acetylation and aflatoxin biosynthesis in A. flavusis limited. Here, a global acetylome analysisof A.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  14. Exposure of Aspergillus flavus NRRL 3357 to the Environmental Toxin, 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxin, Results in a Hyper Aflatoxicogenic Phenotype: A Possible Role for Caleosin/Peroxygenase (AfPXG)

    • Frontiers in Microbiology
    • Aflatoxins (AFs) as potent food contaminants are highly detrimental to human and animal health. The production of such biological toxins is influenced by environmental factors including pollutants, such as dioxins. Here, we report the biological feedback of an active AF-producer strain of A. flavus upon in vitro exposure to the most toxic congener of dioxins, the 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD). The phenotype of TCDD-exposed A.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Dioxins
      • Chemical contaminants
      • Natural toxins
  15. Probiotic bacteria and yeasts adsorb aflatoxin M1 in milk and degrade it to less toxic AFM1-metabolites

    • Toxicon
    • Author(s): M.P. Martínez, A.P. Magnoli, M.L. González Pereyra, L. Cavaglieri

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  16. Simultaneous Determination of Twenty Mycotoxins in the Korean Soybean Paste Doenjang by LC-MS/MS with Immunoaffinity Cleanup

    • Toxins
    • Doenjang, a Korean fermented soybean paste, is vulnerable to contamination by mycotoxins because it is directly exposed to environmental microbiota during fermentation. A method that simultaneously determines 20 mycotoxins in doenjang, including aflatoxins (AFs), ochratoxin A (OTA), zearalenone (ZEN), and fumonisins (FBs) with an immunoaffinity column cleanup was optimized and validated in doenjang using LC-MS/MS.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
      • Natural toxins
  17. Involvement of Ahr Pathway in Toxicity of Aflatoxins and Other Mycotoxins

    • Frontiers in Microbiology
    • The purpose of this review is to present information about the role of activation of aflatoxins and other mycotoxins, of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) pathway. Aflatoxins and other mycotoxins are a diverse group of secondary metabolites that can be contaminants in a broad range of agricultural products and feeds. Some species of Aspergillus, Alternaria, Penicilium, and Fusarium are major producers of mycotoxins, some of which are toxic and carcinogenic.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  18. An Automated and High-Throughput Immunoaffinity Magnetic Bead-Based Sample Clean-Up Platform for the Determination of Aflatoxins in Grains and Oils Using UPLC-FLD

    • Toxins
    • Sample clean-up remains the most time-consuming and error-prone step in the whole analytical procedure for aflatoxins (AFTs) analysis. Herein, an automated and high-throughput sample clean-up platform was developed with a disposable, cost-effective immunoaffinity magnetic bead-based kit. Under optimized conditions, the automated method takes less than 30 min to simultaneously purify 20 samples without requiring any centrifugation or filtering steps.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  19. Combined biocompatible medium with molecularly imprinted polymers for determination of aflatoxins B1 in real sample

    • Journal of Separation Science
    • A kind of molecularly imprinted polymers modified with biocompatible medium were prepared by suspension polymerization. The obtained hybrid materials were used as the adsorbents for the solid‐phase extraction of aflatoxins B1 in real samples. A structural analog of the target, 6‐methyl‐4‐phenylchroman‐2‐one was used as the pseudo‐template, owing to their lower toxicity and cheaper price compared with aflatoxins B1, and methacrylic acid and glycidyl methacrylate were used as the co‐monomers.

      • Natural toxins
      • Aflatoxins
      • Mycotoxins
  20. Simultaneous Determination of Four Aflatoxins in Dark Tea by Multifunctional Purification Column and Immunoaffinity Column Coupled to Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry

    • Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
      • Natural toxins
      • Aflatoxins
  21. On-spot surface enhanced Raman scattering detection of Aflatoxin B1 in peanut extracts using gold nanobipyramids evenly trapped into the AAO nanoholes

    • Food Chemistry
    • Author(s): Bingyong Lin, Palanisamy Kannan, Bin Qiu, Zhenyu Lin, Longhua Guo

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  22. Aflatoxins in Food and Feed: An Overview on Prevalence, Detection and Control Strategies

    • Frontiers in Microbiology
    • Aflatoxins produced by the Aspergillus species are highly toxic, carcinogenic, and cause severe contamination to food sources, leading to serious health consequences. Contaminations by aflatoxins have been reported in food and feed, such as groundnuts, millet, sesame seeds, maize, wheat, rice, fig, spices and cocoa due to fungal infection during pre- and post-harvest conditions.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  23. Effects of caraway and juniper essential oils on aflatoxigenic fungi growth and aflatoxins secretion in polenta

    • Journal of Food Processing and Preservation
    • Inhibitory activity of caraway and juniper essential oils was tested against two aflatoxigenic strains (Aspergillus flavus—four isolates and Aspergillus parasiticus—one isolate) using the method of agar plates. A. flavus IKBT and A. flavus IKB isolated from corn flour, A. flavus IKT isolated from peanuts, and A. flavus IKK isolated from flint corn. A. parasiticus CBS 260.67 was obtained from the Centralbureau voor Schimmelcultures (CBS, Utrecht, The Netherlands).

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  24. A Label-Free Ultrasensitive Microfluidic Surface Plasmon Resonance Biosensor for Aflatoxin B1 detection using Nanoparticles integrated Gold chip

    • Food Chemistry
    • Author(s): Hema Bhardwaj, Gajjala Sumana, Christophe A. Marquette

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins
  25. Occurrence and Seasonal Variations of Aflatoxin M1 in Milk from Punjab, Pakistan

    • Toxins
    • The manifestation of aflatoxins in feed and food is a major issue in the world as its presence leads to some health problems. This study investigates the incidence of aflatoxin M1 (AFM1) contamination in raw milk samples which were collected from Punjab, Pakistan. The Cluster Random Sampling technique was used to collect 960 milk samples from five different regions, and samples were collected every month. The AFM1 level in raw milk was analyzed by the ELISA technique.

      • Aflatoxins
      • Natural toxins