Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions

Zearalenone (ZEN) contamination from Fusarium graminearum colonization is particularly important in food and feed wheat, especially during post-harvest storage with legislative limits for both food and feed grain. Indicators of the relative risk from exceeding these limits would be useful. We examin...

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Published in:Toxins
Main Authors: Esther Garcia-Cela, Elsa Kiaitsi, Michael Sulyok, Angel Medina, Naresh Magan
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2018
Subjects:
DML
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2072-6651/10/2/86/ 2023-08-20T04:06:09+02:00 Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions Esther Garcia-Cela Elsa Kiaitsi Michael Sulyok Angel Medina Naresh Magan agris 2018-02-17 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Mycotoxins https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Toxins; Volume 10; Issue 2; Pages: 86 Fusarium graminearum mycotoxins water activity temperature respiration rates risk cereals Text 2018 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086 2023-07-31T21:23:45Z Zearalenone (ZEN) contamination from Fusarium graminearum colonization is particularly important in food and feed wheat, especially during post-harvest storage with legislative limits for both food and feed grain. Indicators of the relative risk from exceeding these limits would be useful. We examined the effect of different water activities (aw; 0.95–0.90) and temperature (10–25 °C) in naturally contaminated and irradiated wheat grain, both inoculated with F. graminearum and stored for 15 days on (a) respiration rate; (b) dry matter losses (DML); (c) ZEN production and (d) relationship between DML and ZEN contamination relative to the EU legislative limits. Gas Chromatography was used to measure the temporal respiration rates and the total accumulated CO2 production. There was an increase in temporal CO2 production rates in wetter and warmer conditions in all treatments, with the highest respiration in the 25 °C × 0.95 aw treatments + F. graminearum inoculation. This was reflected in the total accumulated CO2 in the treatments. The maximum DMLs were in the 0.95 aw/20–25 °C treatments and at 10 °C/0.95 aw. The DMLs were modelled to produce contour maps of the environmental conditions resulting in maximum/minimum losses. Contamination with ZEN/ZEN-related compounds were quantified. Maximum production was at 25 °C/0.95–0.93 aw and 20 °C/0.95 aw. ZEN contamination levels plotted against DMLs for all the treatments showed that at ca. <1.0% DML, there was a low risk of ZEN contamination exceeding EU legislative limits, while at >1.0% DML, the risk was high. This type of data is important in building a database for the development of a post-harvest decision support system for relative risks of different mycotoxins. Text DML MDPI Open Access Publishing Toxins 10 2 86
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic Fusarium graminearum
mycotoxins
water activity
temperature
respiration rates
risk
cereals
spellingShingle Fusarium graminearum
mycotoxins
water activity
temperature
respiration rates
risk
cereals
Esther Garcia-Cela
Elsa Kiaitsi
Michael Sulyok
Angel Medina
Naresh Magan
Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions
topic_facet Fusarium graminearum
mycotoxins
water activity
temperature
respiration rates
risk
cereals
description Zearalenone (ZEN) contamination from Fusarium graminearum colonization is particularly important in food and feed wheat, especially during post-harvest storage with legislative limits for both food and feed grain. Indicators of the relative risk from exceeding these limits would be useful. We examined the effect of different water activities (aw; 0.95–0.90) and temperature (10–25 °C) in naturally contaminated and irradiated wheat grain, both inoculated with F. graminearum and stored for 15 days on (a) respiration rate; (b) dry matter losses (DML); (c) ZEN production and (d) relationship between DML and ZEN contamination relative to the EU legislative limits. Gas Chromatography was used to measure the temporal respiration rates and the total accumulated CO2 production. There was an increase in temporal CO2 production rates in wetter and warmer conditions in all treatments, with the highest respiration in the 25 °C × 0.95 aw treatments + F. graminearum inoculation. This was reflected in the total accumulated CO2 in the treatments. The maximum DMLs were in the 0.95 aw/20–25 °C treatments and at 10 °C/0.95 aw. The DMLs were modelled to produce contour maps of the environmental conditions resulting in maximum/minimum losses. Contamination with ZEN/ZEN-related compounds were quantified. Maximum production was at 25 °C/0.95–0.93 aw and 20 °C/0.95 aw. ZEN contamination levels plotted against DMLs for all the treatments showed that at ca. <1.0% DML, there was a low risk of ZEN contamination exceeding EU legislative limits, while at >1.0% DML, the risk was high. This type of data is important in building a database for the development of a post-harvest decision support system for relative risks of different mycotoxins.
format Text
author Esther Garcia-Cela
Elsa Kiaitsi
Michael Sulyok
Angel Medina
Naresh Magan
author_facet Esther Garcia-Cela
Elsa Kiaitsi
Michael Sulyok
Angel Medina
Naresh Magan
author_sort Esther Garcia-Cela
title Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions
title_short Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions
title_full Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions
title_fullStr Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Fusarium graminearum in Stored Wheat: Use of CO2 Production to Quantify Dry Matter Losses and Relate This to Relative Risks of Zearalenone Contamination under Interacting Environmental Conditions
title_sort fusarium graminearum in stored wheat: use of co2 production to quantify dry matter losses and relate this to relative risks of zearalenone contamination under interacting environmental conditions
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086
op_coverage agris
genre DML
genre_facet DML
op_source Toxins; Volume 10; Issue 2; Pages: 86
op_relation Mycotoxins
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins10020086
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