Mass Spectrometry-Based Detection of Mycotoxins in Imported Meat and Their Perspective Role on Myocardial Apoptosis.

Burger CVD Imported meat LCMSMS Mycotoxins Myocardial apoptosis

Journal

Current medicinal chemistry
ISSN: 1875-533X
Titre abrégé: Curr Med Chem
Pays: United Arab Emirates
ID NLM: 9440157

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
09 Jun 2023
Historique:
received: 24 01 2023
revised: 29 03 2023
accepted: 14 04 2023
medline: 12 6 2023
pubmed: 12 6 2023
entrez: 12 6 2023
Statut: aheadofprint

Résumé

Fungal mycotoxins are the secondary metabolite and are harmful to plants, animals, and humans. Common aflatoxins present and isolated from feeds and food comprises aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, and G2. Public health threats or risk of foodborne disease posed by mycotoxins, especially the export or import of such meat products are of primary concern. This study aims to determine the concentration of the level of aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, G2 M1, and M2 respectively in imported burger meat. The present work is designed to select and collect the various sample of meat products from different sources and subjected to mycotoxin analysis by LCMS/MS. Random selection was made on sites of burger meat that was for sale. Simultaneous presence of several mycotoxins in the same sample of imported meat under the set conditions of LCMS/MS detected 26% (18 samples) were positive for various mycotoxins. The most frequent mycotoxins proportion in the analyzed samples was aflatoxin B1 (50%) followed by aflatoxin G1 (44%), aflatoxin G2 (38.8%), aflatoxin B2 (33%) respectively were least among all with 16.66 and 11.11%. A positive correlation is deduced between CVD and mycotoxin present in burger meat. Isolated mycotoxins initiate death receptor-mediated apoptosis, death receptor-mediated necrosis, mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis, mitochondrial-mediated necrosis, and immunogenic cell deaths through various pathways that can damage the cardiac tissues. The presence of these toxins in such samples is just the tip of the iceberg. Further investigation is necessary for complete clarifications of toxins on human health especially on CVD and other related metabolic complications.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Fungal mycotoxins are the secondary metabolite and are harmful to plants, animals, and humans. Common aflatoxins present and isolated from feeds and food comprises aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, and G2. Public health threats or risk of foodborne disease posed by mycotoxins, especially the export or import of such meat products are of primary concern. This study aims to determine the concentration of the level of aflatoxins B1, B2, G1, G2 M1, and M2 respectively in imported burger meat.
METHOD METHODS
The present work is designed to select and collect the various sample of meat products from different sources and subjected to mycotoxin analysis by LCMS/MS. Random selection was made on sites of burger meat that was for sale.
RESULTS RESULTS
Simultaneous presence of several mycotoxins in the same sample of imported meat under the set conditions of LCMS/MS detected 26% (18 samples) were positive for various mycotoxins. The most frequent mycotoxins proportion in the analyzed samples was aflatoxin B1 (50%) followed by aflatoxin G1 (44%), aflatoxin G2 (38.8%), aflatoxin B2 (33%) respectively were least among all with 16.66 and 11.11%.
DISCUSSION CONCLUSIONS
A positive correlation is deduced between CVD and mycotoxin present in burger meat. Isolated mycotoxins initiate death receptor-mediated apoptosis, death receptor-mediated necrosis, mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis, mitochondrial-mediated necrosis, and immunogenic cell deaths through various pathways that can damage the cardiac tissues.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
The presence of these toxins in such samples is just the tip of the iceberg. Further investigation is necessary for complete clarifications of toxins on human health especially on CVD and other related metabolic complications.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37303172
pii: CMC-EPUB-132428
doi: 10.2174/0929867330666230609100707
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Informations de copyright

Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.

Auteurs

Maged Al Ansari (MA)

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Fahad A Al Abbasi (FAA)

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Salman Hosawi (S)

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Mirza Rafi Baig (MR)

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Sultan Alhayyani (S)

Department of Chemistry, College of Sciences & Arts, King Abdulaziz University, Rabigh King Abdulaziz University.

Vikas Kumar (V)

Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Shalom Institute of Health and Allied Sciences. SHUATS, Naini, Prayagraj, India.

Turky Omar Asar (TO)

Department of Biology, College of Science and Arts at Alkamil, University of Jeddah, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Firoz Anwar (F)

Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Sciences, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Classifications MeSH