Natural co-occurrence of mycotoxins in wheat grains from Italy and Syria

•This is the first study focused on comparing mycotoxin contamination levels between wheat grains from Italy and from Syria.•MSPD–HPLC–MS/MS allowed 25 mycotoxins to be studied in Syria and Italian samples.•Syrian samples were mainly contaminated by OTA and aflatoxins.•Italian samples were contamina...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food chemistry 2014-08, Vol.157, p.111-118
Hauptverfasser: Alkadri, D., Rubert, J., Prodi, A., Pisi, A., Mañes, J., Soler, C.
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container_end_page 118
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container_start_page 111
container_title Food chemistry
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creator Alkadri, D.
Rubert, J.
Prodi, A.
Pisi, A.
Mañes, J.
Soler, C.
description •This is the first study focused on comparing mycotoxin contamination levels between wheat grains from Italy and from Syria.•MSPD–HPLC–MS/MS allowed 25 mycotoxins to be studied in Syria and Italian samples.•Syrian samples were mainly contaminated by OTA and aflatoxins.•Italian samples were contaminated by DON, 15-ADON and emerging Fusarium toxins.•The results confirmed that climatic conditions play a key role in occurrence of moulds and consequently mycotoxins. This article describes the application of an analytical method for the detection of 25 mycotoxins in wheat grain based on simultaneous extraction using matrix solid-phase dispersion (MSPD) followed by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry, a hybrid triple quadrupole-linear ion trap mass spectrometer (QTrap®). Information Dependent Acquisition (IDA), an extra confirmation tool for samples that contain the target mycotoxins, was used. The analysis of 40 Syrian and 46 Italian wheat grain samples interestingly showed that Syrian samples were mainly contaminated with ochratoxin A and aflatoxins, whereas Italian samples with deoxynivalenol and 15-acetyldeoxynivalenol. Emerging Fusarium mycotoxins were predominant in Italian samples compared to the Syrian. Among the analysed samples, only one was found containing zeralenone with level above the maximum European recommended concentration (100ppb). These results confirm that climatic differences between Syria and Italy, both in Mediterranean basin, play a key role in the diversity of fungal genera and mycotoxins in wheat grains.
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subjects Aflatoxins - analysis
Biological and medical sciences
Chromatography, Liquid - methods
Co-occurrence
EDI
Food toxicology
Fusarium
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry - methods
Italy
Liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry
Medical sciences
Mycotoxins
Mycotoxins - analysis
Plant poisons toxicology
Syria
Toxicology
Triticum - chemistry
Triticum aestivum
Wheat grain
title Natural co-occurrence of mycotoxins in wheat grains from Italy and Syria
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