Free and bound fumonisins in gluten-free food products
✍ Scribed by Chiara Dall'Asta; Gianni Galaverna; Mattia Mangia; Stefano Sforza; Arnaldo Dossena; Rosangela Marchelli
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 476 KB
- Volume
- 53
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1613-4125
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
In this work a multiresidual LC‐ESI‐MS/MS method for the simultaneous detection of free and bound fumonisins is described, which allowed for a very low LOD and a very good recovery for all the analytes. The method was applied to the determination of free and bound fumonisins in several gluten‐free products from the Italian market. Free fumonisins were found to occur in 90% of the samples: the overall median value was below the EU legal limit for foods for human consumption (800 μg/kg). Nonetheless, fumonisins occurred in several samples at concentrations above the legal limit, reaching also very strong contamination levels (maximum concentration level: 3310 μg/kg). Anyway, considering the limited diet of people suffering of the celiac disease or allergic to other wheat proteins, the incidence of fumonisin contamination may be envisaged as problematic. Furthermore, bound fumonisins were found to be present in all the analysed samples at similar or even higher amounts than the free forms. In many cases the sum of free and bound fumonisins exceeded the EU legal limit for total fumonisins also for those samples characterized by a low contamination of free fumonisins, thus opening a new important task to be addressed for the risk assessment in this field.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Background Epidemiological as well as animal studies have shown that environmental factors such as nutrition contribute to the development of diabetes. In this study we investigated whether the early introduction of a gluten-free diet can in¯uence the onset and/or incidence of diabetes, as well as i
## Abstract Food materials dried by the accelerated freeze drying (A.F.D.) process have been tested for free radicals and the concentration and properties of the free radicals compared with those in fresh heart muscle. In fresh muscle at 77° K, the free‐radical concentration was between 2.0 and 5.2
## Abstract **Scope**: To improve our understanding of the interaction of food allergens with cells of the immune system, the endocytosis by human monocytes of bovine β‐lactoglobulin (BLG) and ovomucoid (OM) – two major food allergens – and human serum albumin (HSA) was studied. **Methods and resu