精油对谷物储藏霉菌生长和储藏有机玉米粒中黄曲霉毒素形成的抑制作用

JSFA reports Pub Date : 2024-07-11 DOI:10.1002/jsf2.210
Esther F. Iwayemi, Jianmei Yu, Djaafar Rehrah, Shurrita S. Davis, Leonard L. Williams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

收获后谷物储藏过程中的霉菌污染会降低谷物品质并产生霉菌毒素,造成经济损失和健康问题。本研究使用马铃薯葡萄糖琼脂(PDA)和选择性培养基平板,分别评估了不同浓度(0-0.8 毫克/毫升)的六种精油(肉桂、丁香、丁香酚、橙萜烯、牛至和百里香油)对总霉菌属和特定霉菌属生长的抑制作用。在 22 摄氏度下培养 7 天后,测量各处理的抗真菌指数(AI)。使用模拟熏蒸法测试了 EO 在储存的有机玉米粒中的杀菌活性,并在 6 周内每两周测定一次玉米粒中的黄曲霉毒素含量。总体而言,丁香酚对霉菌生长的抑制效果最好,肉桂油紧随其后。肉桂油对曲霉菌和青霉的生长也一直表现出最高的 AI 值和最低的 IC50 值(0.065 毫克/毫升),其次是丁香油,IC50 值为 0.12 毫克/毫升。镰刀菌属对环氧乙烷更敏感,尤其是肉桂油(IC50 = 0.006 毫克/毫升)以及丁香酚和牛至油(IC50 = 0.01 毫克/毫升)。在模拟熏蒸试验中,肉桂油、牛至油和百里香油(0.05 mL/25 g 玉米)在水活度为 0.85、温度为 25 和 35°C 的条件下,能在 42 天的储存期间显著抑制霉菌的生长和黄曲霉毒素的产生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Inhibitory effects of essential oils on the growth of grain storage molds and the formation of aflatoxin in stored organic corn grains

Inhibitory effects of essential oils on the growth of grain storage molds and the formation of aflatoxin in stored organic corn grains

Background

Mold contamination in post-harvest grain storage degrades grain quality and produces mycotoxins, causing economic losses and health issues. This study evaluated the inhibitory effects of six essential oils (cinnamon, clove, eugenol, orange terpenes, oregano, and thyme oil) on total and specific mold genera growth using potato dextrose agar (PDA) and selective media plates, respectively, at different concentrations of EOs (0–0.8 mg/mL). The antifungal index (AI) of each treatment were measured after 7 days incubation at 22°C. The fungicidal activity of EOs in stored organic corn grains was tested using a simulated fumigation method, and the aflatoxin contents in the corn grains were determined biweekly for 6 weeks.

Results

Results indicate that the tested EOs, except orange terpenes, significantly inhibited mold growth. Overall, eugenol demonstrated the highest effectiveness against total mold growth with cinnamon oil following closely behind. The cinnamon oil also consistently showed highest AI and lowest IC50 (0.065 mg/mL) against the growth of Aspergillus and Penicillium followed by clove oil with IC50 being 0.12 mg/mL. The Fusarium spp. was more sensitive to EOs, particularly cinnamon oil (IC50 = 0.006 mg/mL), and eugenol and oregano oil (IC50 = 0.01 mg/mL). In the simulated fumigation tests, cinnamon, oregano, and thyme oils at 0.05 mL/25 g corn significantly inhibited the mold growth and aflatoxin production at water activity 0.85, and temperature 25 and 35°C over a period of 42 days storage.

Conclusion

The EOs tested in this study except orange terpenes can potentially serve as alternatives to toxic synthetic fungicides/fumigants for organic corn grain protection during storage.

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