Cargando…

Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora

Deoxynivalenol, a mycotoxin that may present in almost all cereal products, can cause huge economic losses in the agriculture industry and seriously endanger food safety and human health. Microbial detoxifications using microbial consortia may provide a safe and effective strategy for DON mitigation...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cai, Chenggang, Zhao, Miaomiao, Yao, Feng, Zhu, Ruiyu, Cai, Haiying, Shao, Suqin, Li, Xiu-Zhen, Zhou, Ting
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9413130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36006199
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14080537
_version_ 1784775661466943488
author Cai, Chenggang
Zhao, Miaomiao
Yao, Feng
Zhu, Ruiyu
Cai, Haiying
Shao, Suqin
Li, Xiu-Zhen
Zhou, Ting
author_facet Cai, Chenggang
Zhao, Miaomiao
Yao, Feng
Zhu, Ruiyu
Cai, Haiying
Shao, Suqin
Li, Xiu-Zhen
Zhou, Ting
author_sort Cai, Chenggang
collection PubMed
description Deoxynivalenol, a mycotoxin that may present in almost all cereal products, can cause huge economic losses in the agriculture industry and seriously endanger food safety and human health. Microbial detoxifications using microbial consortia may provide a safe and effective strategy for DON mitigation. In order to study the interactions involving DON degradation and change in microbial flora, four samples from different natural niches, including a chicken stable (expJ), a sheep stable (expY), a wheat field (expT) and a horse stable (expM) were collected and reacted with purified DON. After being co-incubated at 30 °C with 130 rpm shaking for 96 h, DON was reduced by 74.5%, 43.0%, 46.7%, and 86.0% by expJ, expY, expT, and expM, respectively. After DON (0.8 mL of 100 μg/mL) was co-cultivated with 0.2 mL of the supernatant of each sample (i.e., suspensions of microbial communities) at 30 °C for 96 h, DON was reduced by 98.9%, 99.8%, 79.5%, and 78.9% in expJ, expY, expT, and expM, respectively, and was completely degraded after 8 days by all samples except of expM. DON was confirmed being transformed into de-epoxy DON (DOM-1) by the microbial community of expM. The bacterial flora of the samples was compared through 16S rDNA flux sequencing pre- and post the addition of DON. The results indicated that the diversities of bacterial flora were affected by DON. After DON treatment, the most abundant bacteria belong to Galbibacter (16.1%) and Pedobacter (8.2%) in expJ; Flavobacterium (5.9%) and Pedobacter (5.5%) in expY; f_Microscillaceae (13.5%), B1-7BS (13.4%), and RB41 (10.5%) in expT; and Acinetobacter (24.1%), Massilia (8.8%), and Arthrobacter (7.6%) in expM. This first study on the interactions between DON and natural microbial flora provides useful information and a methodology for further development of microbial consortia for mycotoxin detoxifications.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9413130
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94131302022-08-27 Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora Cai, Chenggang Zhao, Miaomiao Yao, Feng Zhu, Ruiyu Cai, Haiying Shao, Suqin Li, Xiu-Zhen Zhou, Ting Toxins (Basel) Article Deoxynivalenol, a mycotoxin that may present in almost all cereal products, can cause huge economic losses in the agriculture industry and seriously endanger food safety and human health. Microbial detoxifications using microbial consortia may provide a safe and effective strategy for DON mitigation. In order to study the interactions involving DON degradation and change in microbial flora, four samples from different natural niches, including a chicken stable (expJ), a sheep stable (expY), a wheat field (expT) and a horse stable (expM) were collected and reacted with purified DON. After being co-incubated at 30 °C with 130 rpm shaking for 96 h, DON was reduced by 74.5%, 43.0%, 46.7%, and 86.0% by expJ, expY, expT, and expM, respectively. After DON (0.8 mL of 100 μg/mL) was co-cultivated with 0.2 mL of the supernatant of each sample (i.e., suspensions of microbial communities) at 30 °C for 96 h, DON was reduced by 98.9%, 99.8%, 79.5%, and 78.9% in expJ, expY, expT, and expM, respectively, and was completely degraded after 8 days by all samples except of expM. DON was confirmed being transformed into de-epoxy DON (DOM-1) by the microbial community of expM. The bacterial flora of the samples was compared through 16S rDNA flux sequencing pre- and post the addition of DON. The results indicated that the diversities of bacterial flora were affected by DON. After DON treatment, the most abundant bacteria belong to Galbibacter (16.1%) and Pedobacter (8.2%) in expJ; Flavobacterium (5.9%) and Pedobacter (5.5%) in expY; f_Microscillaceae (13.5%), B1-7BS (13.4%), and RB41 (10.5%) in expT; and Acinetobacter (24.1%), Massilia (8.8%), and Arthrobacter (7.6%) in expM. This first study on the interactions between DON and natural microbial flora provides useful information and a methodology for further development of microbial consortia for mycotoxin detoxifications. MDPI 2022-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9413130/ /pubmed/36006199 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14080537 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Cai, Chenggang
Zhao, Miaomiao
Yao, Feng
Zhu, Ruiyu
Cai, Haiying
Shao, Suqin
Li, Xiu-Zhen
Zhou, Ting
Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora
title Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora
title_full Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora
title_fullStr Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora
title_full_unstemmed Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora
title_short Deoxynivalenol Degradation by Various Microbial Communities and Its Impacts on Different Bacterial Flora
title_sort deoxynivalenol degradation by various microbial communities and its impacts on different bacterial flora
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9413130/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36006199
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins14080537
work_keys_str_mv AT caichenggang deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT zhaomiaomiao deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT yaofeng deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT zhuruiyu deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT caihaiying deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT shaosuqin deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT lixiuzhen deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora
AT zhouting deoxynivalenoldegradationbyvariousmicrobialcommunitiesanditsimpactsondifferentbacterialflora