Litcius/Paper detail

Current Review of Mycotoxin Biodegradation and Bioadsorption: Microorganisms, Mechanisms, and Main Important Applications

Seyni Ndiaye, Minhui Zhang, Mouhamed Fall, Nicolas M. Ayessou, Qi Zhang, Peiwu Li

2022Toxins67 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites produced by fungi. Food/feed contamination by mycotoxins is a great threat to food safety. The contamination can occur along the food chain and can cause many diseases in humans and animals, and it also can cause economic losses. Many detoxification methods, including physical, chemical, and biological techniques, have been established to eliminate mycotoxins in food/feed. The biological method, with mycotoxin detoxification by microorganisms, is reliable, efficient, less costly, and easy to use compared with physical and chemical ones. However, it is important to discover the metabolite's toxicity resulting from mycotoxin biodegradation. These compounds can be less or more toxic than the parent. On the other hand, mechanisms involved in a mycotoxin's biological control remain still unclear. Mostly, there is little information about the method used by microorganisms to control mycotoxins. Therefore, this article presents an overview of the most toxic mycotoxins and the different microorganisms that have a mycotoxin detoxification ability. At the same time, different screening methods for degradation compound elucidation are given. In addition, the review summarizes mechanisms of mycotoxin biodegradation and gives some applications.

Topics & Concepts

MycotoxinDetoxification (alternative medicine)MicroorganismBiodegradationContaminationBiotechnologyBiologyFood chainBiochemical engineeringBacteriaEcologyMedicineEngineeringAlternative medicinePathologyGeneticsMycotoxins in Agriculture and FoodPlant and fungal interactionsAgricultural safety and regulations
Current Review of Mycotoxin Biodegradation and Bioadsorption: Microorganisms, Mechanisms, and Main Important Applications | Litcius