Mycotoxins are fungal secondary metabolites that contaminate various feedstuffs
and agricultural crops. The contamination of food by mycotoxins can occur before
production, during storage, processing, transportation or marketing of the food products.
High temperature, moisture content and water activity are among the predisposing factors
that facilitate the production of mycotoxins in food. Aflatoxins, ochratoxins, fumonisins,
deoxynivalenol and zearalenone are all considered the major mycotoxins produced in food
and feedstuffs. In Africa, mycotoxin contamination is considered to be a major problem
with implications that affect human and animal health and economy. Aflatoxin-related
hepatic diseases are reported in many African countries. Ochratoxin and fumonisin toxicity
in humans and animals is widespread in Africa. The available, updated information on the
incidence of mycotoxin contamination, decontamination and its public health importance in
Africa is lacking. The aim of this review is to highlight, update and discuss the
available information on the incidence of mycotoxins in African countries. The public
health implications and the recommended strategies for control of mycotoxins in food and
agricultural crops are also discussed.
There are growing concerns about the increase in hyperthyroidism in pet cats due to exposure to organohalogen contaminants and their hydroxylated metabolites. This study investigated the blood contaminants polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) and their hydroxylated and methoxylated derivatives (OH-PCBs, OH-PBDEs, and MeO-PBDEs), in pet dogs and cats. We also measured the residue levels of these compounds in commercially available pet foods. Chemical analyses of PCBs and OH-PCBs showed that the OH-PCB levels were 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower in cat and dog food products than in their blood, suggesting that the origin of OH-PCBs in pet dogs and cats is PCBs ingested with their food. The major congeners of OH-/MeO-PBDEs identified in both pet food products and blood were natural products (6OH-/MeO-BDE47 and 2'OH-/MeO-BDE68) from marine organisms. In particular, higher concentrations of 6OH-BDE47 than 2'OH-BDE68 and two MeO-PBDE congeners were observed in the cat blood, although MeO-BDEs were dominant in cat foods, suggesting the efficient biotransformation of 6OH-BDE47 from 6MeO-BDE47 in cats. We performed in vitro demethylation experiments to confirm the biotransformation of MeO-PBDEs to OH-PBDEs using liver microsomes. The results showed that 6MeO-BDE47 and 2'MeO-BDE68 were demethylated to 6OH-BDE47 and 2'OH-BDE68 in both animals, whereas no hydroxylated metabolite from BDE47 was detected. The present study suggests that pet cats are exposed to MeO-PBDEs through cat food products containing fish flavors and that the OH-PBDEs in cat blood are derived from the CYP-dependent demethylation of naturally occurring MeO-PBDE congeners, not from the hydroxylation of PBDEs.
Highlights d UV-stabilizers and BDE-209 were industrially compounded into plastic resin pellets d The pellets were fed to seabird chicks under environmentally relevant conditions d The additives were detected in liver and adipose at 10 1 -10 5 times above controls d This study provides evidence of transfer and accumulation of plastic additives
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