丝状真菌的毒素。

D. Bhatnagar, Jiujiang Yu†, K. Ehrlich
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引用次数: 195

摘要

真菌毒素是真菌的低分子量次生代谢产物。最重要的真菌毒素是农产品、食品和饲料中的污染物。产生这些毒素的真菌在收获前和储存期间都会产生这些毒素。虽然产毒真菌对商品的污染经常发生在气候炎热潮湿的地区(即有利于真菌生长的条件),但它们也可以在温带条件下发现。真菌毒素的产生取决于产生真菌的类型和环境条件,如基质、水活度(水分和相对湿度)、暴露于应激条件下的持续时间以及微生物、昆虫或其他动物的相互作用。虽然有文献记录了人类中真菌中毒的暴发,但其中一些尚未得到很好的描述,真菌毒素与由此产生的毒性作用之间的直接关系也未在体内得到很好的确定。尽管大多数毒素的具体作用方式尚未完全确定,但已报道了对原核和真核系统(包括人类)的急性和慢性影响。真菌毒素的毒性因毒素、接触真菌毒素的动物种类、接触程度、年龄和营养状况而有很大差异。大多数真菌毒素的毒性作用仅限于特定器官,但有几种真菌毒素影响许多器官。某些真菌毒素诱导癌症是这些毒素的慢性效应,值得关注。尽管在国家和国际一级为清除受污染的商品作出了监管努力,但从食品和饲料中消除真菌毒素几乎是不可能的。这是因为真菌毒素是高度稳定的化合物,产生真菌的真菌无处不在,食品污染可能发生在收获前后。然而,良好的农场管理规范和适当的储存设施将毒素污染问题降至最低。目前的研究旨在开发天然生物防治竞争性真菌,并增强宿主对真菌生长或毒素产生的抵抗力。这些努力可以完全防止毒素的形成。减少人类和动物接触受污染食品和饲料风险的严格计划还包括经济上可行和安全的解毒过程和饮食调整。虽然已对某些真菌毒素进行了风险评估,但还需要更多的、系统的人类接触流行病学数据,以确定真菌毒素的毒理学参数和人类安全剂量。期望完全消除霉菌毒素问题是不合理的。但是,需要多种方法来最大限度地减少毒素对整个农业的经济影响及其对人类和动物健康的危害。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Toxins of filamentous fungi.
Mycotoxins are low-molecular-weight secondary metabolites of fungi. The most significant mycotoxins are contaminants of agricultural commodities, foods and feeds. Fungi that produce these toxins do so both prior to harvest and during storage. Although contamination of commodities by toxigenic fungi occurs frequently in areas with a hot and humid climate (i.e. conditions favorable for fungal growth), they can also be found in temperate conditions. Production of mycotoxins is dependent upon the type of producing fungus and environmental conditions such as the substrate, water activity (moisture and relative humidity), duration of exposure to stress conditions and microbial, insect or other animal interactions. Although outbreaks of mycotoxicoses in humans have been documented, several of these have not been well characterized, neither has a direct correlation between the mycotoxin and resulting toxic effect been well established in vivo. Even though the specific modes of action of most of the toxins are not well established, acute and chronic effects in prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems, including humans have been reported. The toxicity of the mycotoxins varies considerably with the toxin, the animal species exposed to it, and the extent of exposure, age and nutritional status. Most of the toxic effects of mycotoxins are limited to specific organs, but several mycotoxins affect many organs. Induction of cancer by some mycotoxins is a major concern as a chronic effect of these toxins. It is nearly impossible to eliminate mycotoxins from the foods and feed in spite of the regulatory efforts at the national and international levels to remove the contaminated commodities. This is because mycotoxins are highly stable compounds, the producing fungi are ubiquitous, and food contamination can occur both before and after harvest. Nevertheless, good farm management practices and adequate storage facilities minimize the toxin contamination problems. Current research is designed to develop natural biocontrol competitive fungi and to enhance host resistance against fungal growth or toxin production. These efforts could prevent toxin formation entirely. Rigorous programs for reducing the risk of human and animal exposure to contaminated foods and feed also include economically feasible and safe detoxification processes and dietary modifications. Although risk assessment has been made for some mycotoxins, additional, systematic epidemological data for human exposure is needed for establishing toxicological parameters for mycotoxins and the safe dose for humans. It is unreasonable to expect complete elimination of the mycotoxin problem. But multiple approaches will be needed to minimize the economic impact of the toxins on the entire agriculture industry and their harmfulness to human and animal health.
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