Bacterial bioluminescence as a bioassay for mycotoxins

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Abstract

The use of bacterial bioluminescence as a toxicological assay for mycotoxins was tested with rubratoxin B, zearalenone, penicillic acid, citrinin, ochratoxin A, PR-toxin, aflatoxin B1, and patulin. The concentrations of mycotoxins causing 50% light reduction (EC50) in Photobacterium phosphoreum were determined immediately and at 5 h after reconstitution of the bacteria from a freeze-dried state. Generally, less toxins were required to obtain an EC50 at 5 h. The effects of the above mycotoxins on bioluminescence were determined after 5, 10, 15, and 20 min of incubation with the bacterial suspensions. The concentration of rubratoxin B necessary to elicit an EC50 increased with time, whereas the concentration of citrinin, penicillic acid, patulin, and PR-toxin necessary decreased with time. There was very little change in the concentration of zearalenone, aflatoxin B1, and ochratoxin A required to elicit an EC50 with time. The bacterial bioluminescence assay was most sensitive to patulin and least sensitive to rubratoxin B.

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APA

Yates, I. E., & Porter, J. K. (1982). Bacterial bioluminescence as a bioassay for mycotoxins. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 44(5), 1072–1075. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.44.5.1072-1075.1982

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