Cargando…

Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand

The study focused on the examination of the different fungal species isolated from commercial rice samples, applying conventional culture techniques, as well as different molecular and phylogenic analyses to confirm phenotypic identification. Additionally, the mycotoxin production and contamination...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Laut, Seavchou, Poapolathep, Saranya, Piasai, Onuma, Sommai, Sujinda, Boonyuen, Nattawut, Giorgi, Mario, Zhang, Zhaowei, Fink-Gremmels, Johanna, Poapolathep, Amnart
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9914209/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36766016
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12030487
_version_ 1784885613288226816
author Laut, Seavchou
Poapolathep, Saranya
Piasai, Onuma
Sommai, Sujinda
Boonyuen, Nattawut
Giorgi, Mario
Zhang, Zhaowei
Fink-Gremmels, Johanna
Poapolathep, Amnart
author_facet Laut, Seavchou
Poapolathep, Saranya
Piasai, Onuma
Sommai, Sujinda
Boonyuen, Nattawut
Giorgi, Mario
Zhang, Zhaowei
Fink-Gremmels, Johanna
Poapolathep, Amnart
author_sort Laut, Seavchou
collection PubMed
description The study focused on the examination of the different fungal species isolated from commercial rice samples, applying conventional culture techniques, as well as different molecular and phylogenic analyses to confirm phenotypic identification. Additionally, the mycotoxin production and contamination were analyzed using validated liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). In total, 40 rice samples were obtained covering rice berry, red jasmine rice, brown rice, germinated brown rice, and white rice. The blotting paper technique applied on the 5 different types of rice samples detected 4285 seed-borne fungal infections (26.8%) for 16,000 rice grains. Gross morphological data revealed that 19 fungal isolates belonged to the genera Penicillium/Talaromyces (18 of 90 isolates; 20%) and Aspergillus (72 of 90 isolates; 80%). To check their morphologies, molecular data (fungal sequence-based BLAST results and a phylogenetic tree of the combined ITS, BenA, CaM, and RPB2 datasets) confirmed the initial classification. The phylogenic analysis revealed that eight isolates belonged to P. citrinum and, additionally, one isolate each belonged to P. chermesinum, A. niger, A. fumigatus, and A. tubingensis. Furthermore, four isolates of T. pinophilus and one isolate of each taxon were identified as Talaromyces (T. radicus, T. purpureogenum, and T. islandicus). The results showed that A. niger and T. pinophilus were two commonly occurring fungal species in rice samples. After subculturing, ochratoxin A (OTA), generated by T. pinophilus code W3-04, was discovered using LC-MS/MS. In addition, the Fusarium toxin beauvericin was detected in one of the samples. Aflatoxin B1 or other mycotoxins, such as citrinin, trichothecenes, and fumonisins, were detected. These preliminary findings should provide valuable guidance for hazard analysis critical control point concepts used by commercial food suppliers, including the analysis of multiple mycotoxins. Based on the current findings, mycotoxin analyses should focus on A. niger toxins, including OTA and metabolites of T. pinophilus (recently considered a producer of emerging mycotoxins) to exclude health hazards related to the traditionally high consumption of rice by Thai people.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9914209
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-99142092023-02-11 Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand Laut, Seavchou Poapolathep, Saranya Piasai, Onuma Sommai, Sujinda Boonyuen, Nattawut Giorgi, Mario Zhang, Zhaowei Fink-Gremmels, Johanna Poapolathep, Amnart Foods Article The study focused on the examination of the different fungal species isolated from commercial rice samples, applying conventional culture techniques, as well as different molecular and phylogenic analyses to confirm phenotypic identification. Additionally, the mycotoxin production and contamination were analyzed using validated liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). In total, 40 rice samples were obtained covering rice berry, red jasmine rice, brown rice, germinated brown rice, and white rice. The blotting paper technique applied on the 5 different types of rice samples detected 4285 seed-borne fungal infections (26.8%) for 16,000 rice grains. Gross morphological data revealed that 19 fungal isolates belonged to the genera Penicillium/Talaromyces (18 of 90 isolates; 20%) and Aspergillus (72 of 90 isolates; 80%). To check their morphologies, molecular data (fungal sequence-based BLAST results and a phylogenetic tree of the combined ITS, BenA, CaM, and RPB2 datasets) confirmed the initial classification. The phylogenic analysis revealed that eight isolates belonged to P. citrinum and, additionally, one isolate each belonged to P. chermesinum, A. niger, A. fumigatus, and A. tubingensis. Furthermore, four isolates of T. pinophilus and one isolate of each taxon were identified as Talaromyces (T. radicus, T. purpureogenum, and T. islandicus). The results showed that A. niger and T. pinophilus were two commonly occurring fungal species in rice samples. After subculturing, ochratoxin A (OTA), generated by T. pinophilus code W3-04, was discovered using LC-MS/MS. In addition, the Fusarium toxin beauvericin was detected in one of the samples. Aflatoxin B1 or other mycotoxins, such as citrinin, trichothecenes, and fumonisins, were detected. These preliminary findings should provide valuable guidance for hazard analysis critical control point concepts used by commercial food suppliers, including the analysis of multiple mycotoxins. Based on the current findings, mycotoxin analyses should focus on A. niger toxins, including OTA and metabolites of T. pinophilus (recently considered a producer of emerging mycotoxins) to exclude health hazards related to the traditionally high consumption of rice by Thai people. MDPI 2023-01-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9914209/ /pubmed/36766016 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12030487 Text en © 2023 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
Laut, Seavchou
Poapolathep, Saranya
Piasai, Onuma
Sommai, Sujinda
Boonyuen, Nattawut
Giorgi, Mario
Zhang, Zhaowei
Fink-Gremmels, Johanna
Poapolathep, Amnart
Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand
title Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand
title_full Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand
title_fullStr Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand
title_full_unstemmed Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand
title_short Storage Fungi and Mycotoxins Associated with Rice Samples Commercialized in Thailand
title_sort storage fungi and mycotoxins associated with rice samples commercialized in thailand
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9914209/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36766016
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods12030487
work_keys_str_mv AT lautseavchou storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT poapolathepsaranya storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT piasaionuma storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT sommaisujinda storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT boonyuennattawut storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT giorgimario storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT zhangzhaowei storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT finkgremmelsjohanna storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand
AT poapolathepamnart storagefungiandmycotoxinsassociatedwithricesamplescommercializedinthailand