Porcine small and large intestinal microbiota rapidly hydrolyze the masked mycotoxin deoxynivalenol-3- glucoside and release deoxynivalenol in spiked batch cultures in vitro

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Abstract

Mycotoxin contamination of cereal grains causes well-recognized toxicities in animals and humans, but the fate of plant-bound masked mycotoxins in the gut is less well understood. Masked mycotoxins have been found to be stable under conditions prevailing in the small intestine but are rapidly hydrolyzed by fecal microbiota. This study aims to assess the hydrolysis of the masked mycotoxin deoxynivalenol-3-glucoside (DON3Glc) by the microbiota of different regions of the porcine intestinal tract. Intestinal digesta samples were collected from the jejunum, ileum, cecum, colon, and feces of 5 pigs and immediately frozen under anaerobic conditions. Sample slurries were prepared in M2 culture medium, spiked with DON3Glc or free deoxynivalenol (DON; 2 nmol/ml), and incubated anaerobically for up to 72 h. Mycotoxin concentrations were determined using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, and the microbiota composition was determined using a quantitative PCR methodology. The jejunal microbiota hydrolyzed DON3Glc very slowly, while samples from the ileum, cecum, colon, and feces rapidly and efficiently hydrolyzed DON3Glc. No further metabolism of DON was observed in any sample. The microbial load and microbiota composition in the ileum were significantly different from those in the distal intestinal regions, whereas those in the cecum, colon and feces did not differ.

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Gratz, S. W., Currie, V., Richardson, A. J., Duncan, G., Holtrop, G., Farquharson, F., … Oswald, I. P. (2018). Porcine small and large intestinal microbiota rapidly hydrolyze the masked mycotoxin deoxynivalenol-3- glucoside and release deoxynivalenol in spiked batch cultures in vitro. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 84(2). https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02106-17

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