Mycotoxin Contamination of Dietary and Medicinal Wild Plants in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa
Nineteen dietary and 30 medicinal wild plants used by residents of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa were investigated for the presence of fumonisin B1 and aflatoxin B1. The plants were extracted in water, and cleanup was undertaken on immunoaffinity cartridges; analysis was by HPLC using fl...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2006-07, Vol.54 (15), p.5688-5693 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Nineteen dietary and 30 medicinal wild plants used by residents of the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa were investigated for the presence of fumonisin B1 and aflatoxin B1. The plants were extracted in water, and cleanup was undertaken on immunoaffinity cartridges; analysis was by HPLC using fluorescence detection. None of the plant extracts contained detectable levels of aflatoxin B1; however, eight plants, four dietary and four medicinal, were positive for fumonisin B1 at levels ranging from 34 to 524 μg/kg and from 8 to 1553 μg/kg, respectively. The presence of fumonisin B1 was confirmed by LC-MS/MS using positive ion electrospray ionization. Fumonisin B1 provided characteristic fragment ions at m/z 704, 686, 546, 528, 370, and 352 corresponding to sequential loss of H2O and tricarboxylic acid moieties from the alkyl backbone. These results indicate that exposure to fumonisin B1 is much more widespread than initially thought and is the first report of mycotoxin contamination in South African medicinal and dietary wild plants. Keywords: Fusarium; fumonisins; tandem mass spectrometry; dietary wild plants; medicinal plants; aflatoxins; marog; imifino |
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ISSN: | 0021-8561 1520-5118 |
DOI: | 10.1021/jf060483b |