Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa

Crops frequently contaminated by aflatoxins are important sources of revenue and daily nourishment in manyportions of sub-Saharan Africa. In recent years, reports have associated aflatoxinswith diminished human healthand export opportunities in many African Nations. Aflatoxins are highly carcinogeni...

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Autores principales: Probst, C., Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit, Cotty, P.J.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75898
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author Probst, C.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
author_browse Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
Probst, C.
author_facet Probst, C.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
author_sort Probst, C.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Crops frequently contaminated by aflatoxins are important sources of revenue and daily nourishment in manyportions of sub-Saharan Africa. In recent years, reports have associated aflatoxinswith diminished human healthand export opportunities in many African Nations. Aflatoxins are highly carcinogenic metabolites mainly producedby members of Aspergillus sect. Flavi. The current study examined aflatoxin-producing fungi associatedwith maize grain intended for human consumption in 18 sub-Saharan African countries. 4469 Aspergillus sect.Flavi isolates were obtained from 339 samples. The majority (75%) of isolates belonged to the L strainmorphotype of A. flavus. Minor percentages were A. tamarii (6%), A. parasiticus (1%), and isolates with S strainmorphology (3%). No A. bombycis or A. nomius isolates were detected. Phylogenetic analyses of partial sequencesof the nitrate reductase gene (niaD, 1.3 kb) and the aflatoxin pathway transcription factor gene (aflR, 1.7 kb)were used to verify isolate assignments into species and lineages. Phylogenetics resolved S strain isolates producingonly B aflatoxins into two lineages fully supported by sizes of deletions in the gene region spanning the aflatoxinbiosynthesis genes cypA (aflU) and norB (aflF). One lineage was the A. flavus S strain with either 0.9 or1.5 kb deletions. The second lineage, recently described from Kenya, has a 2.2 kb deletion. Taxa with S strainmorphology differed in distribution with strain SBG limited toWest Africa and both A. minisclerotigenes and thenew lineage from Kenya in Central and East Africa. African A. flavus L strain isolates formed a single clade withL strain isolates from other continents. The sampled maize frequently tested positive for aflatoxins (65%),fumonisins (81%), and deoxynivalenol (40%) indicating the presence of fungi capable of producing the respectivetoxins. Percentage of samples exceeding US limits for total aflatoxins (regulatory limit), fumonisins (advisorylimit), and deoxynivalenol (advisory limit) were 47%, 49%, 4%, respectively.
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spelling CGSpace758982024-08-29T11:41:36Z Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa Probst, C. Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit Cotty, P.J. aspergillus flavus maize aflatoxins mycotoxins food security Crops frequently contaminated by aflatoxins are important sources of revenue and daily nourishment in manyportions of sub-Saharan Africa. In recent years, reports have associated aflatoxinswith diminished human healthand export opportunities in many African Nations. Aflatoxins are highly carcinogenic metabolites mainly producedby members of Aspergillus sect. Flavi. The current study examined aflatoxin-producing fungi associatedwith maize grain intended for human consumption in 18 sub-Saharan African countries. 4469 Aspergillus sect.Flavi isolates were obtained from 339 samples. The majority (75%) of isolates belonged to the L strainmorphotype of A. flavus. Minor percentages were A. tamarii (6%), A. parasiticus (1%), and isolates with S strainmorphology (3%). No A. bombycis or A. nomius isolates were detected. Phylogenetic analyses of partial sequencesof the nitrate reductase gene (niaD, 1.3 kb) and the aflatoxin pathway transcription factor gene (aflR, 1.7 kb)were used to verify isolate assignments into species and lineages. Phylogenetics resolved S strain isolates producingonly B aflatoxins into two lineages fully supported by sizes of deletions in the gene region spanning the aflatoxinbiosynthesis genes cypA (aflU) and norB (aflF). One lineage was the A. flavus S strain with either 0.9 or1.5 kb deletions. The second lineage, recently described from Kenya, has a 2.2 kb deletion. Taxa with S strainmorphology differed in distribution with strain SBG limited toWest Africa and both A. minisclerotigenes and thenew lineage from Kenya in Central and East Africa. African A. flavus L strain isolates formed a single clade withL strain isolates from other continents. The sampled maize frequently tested positive for aflatoxins (65%),fumonisins (81%), and deoxynivalenol (40%) indicating the presence of fungi capable of producing the respectivetoxins. Percentage of samples exceeding US limits for total aflatoxins (regulatory limit), fumonisins (advisorylimit), and deoxynivalenol (advisory limit) were 47%, 49%, 4%, respectively. 2014-03 2016-07-04T08:15:17Z 2016-07-04T08:15:17Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75898 en Limited Access Elsevier Probst, C., Bandyopadhyay, R. & Cotty, P. (2014). Diversity of aflatoxin-producing fungi and their impact on food safety in sub-Saharan Africa. International Journal of Food Microbiology, 174, 113-122.
spellingShingle aspergillus flavus
maize
aflatoxins
mycotoxins
food security
Probst, C.
Bandyopadhyay, Ranajit
Cotty, P.J.
Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa
title Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa
title_full Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa
title_fullStr Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa
title_short Diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subSaharan Africa
title_sort diversity of aflatoxinproducing fungi and their impact on food safety in subsaharan africa
topic aspergillus flavus
maize
aflatoxins
mycotoxins
food security
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/75898
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AT cottypj diversityofaflatoxinproducingfungiandtheirimpactonfoodsafetyinsubsaharanafrica