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Magnetic nanostructured agents for the mitigation of mycotoxins and cyanotoxins in the food chain

Jesús M. González-Jartı́n, Lisandra de Castro Alves, Yolanda Piñeiro, Amparo Alfonso, Rebeca Alvariño, Manuel González Gómez, Mercedes R. Vieytes, J. Rivas, Luís M. Botana

2024Food Chemistry16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Natural toxins, such as mycotoxins and cyanotoxins, can contaminate food and feed, leading to toxicity in humans and animals. This study focused on using nine magnetic nanostructured agents to remove the main types of toxins. Initially, the efficacy of these materials was evaluated in water solutions, revealing that composites with sizes below 3 mm, containing magnetite, activated carbon, esterified pectin, and sodium alginate, removed up to 90% of mycotoxins and cyanotoxins with an adsorption of 873 ng/g. The application of the nanostructures was then assessed in beer, milk, Distillers Dried Grains with Solubles and water contaminated with cyanobacteria. The presence of matrix slightly decreases the adsorption capacity for some toxins. The maximum toxin removal capacity was calculated with cyanotoxins, composites achieved a removal of up to 0.12 mg/g, while nanocomposites (15 μm) reached 36.6 mg/g. Therefore, these findings point out the potential for using nanotechnology in addressing natural toxins contamination.

Topics & Concepts

MycotoxinContaminationChemistryAdsorptionFood chainFood scienceEnvironmental chemistryBiologyOrganic chemistryPaleontologyEcologyMycotoxins in Agriculture and FoodPotato Plant ResearchMicrobial bioremediation and biosurfactants
Magnetic nanostructured agents for the mitigation of mycotoxins and cyanotoxins in the food chain | Litcius