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Industrial-Scale Cleaning Solutions for the Reduction of Fusarium Toxins in Maize.

Michelangelo PascaleAntonio F LogriecoVincenzo LippolisAnnalisa De GirolamoSalvatore CervellieriVeronica Maria Teresa LattanzioBiancamaria CiascaAnna VegaMareike ReichelMatthias GraeberKatarina Slettengren
Published in: Toxins (2022)
Grain cleaning is the most effective non-destructive post-harvest mitigation strategy to reduce high levels of mycotoxins on account of the removal of mold-infected grains and grain fractions with high mycotoxin content. In this study, the reduction in the concentration of some co-occurring Fusarium toxins in maize, namely deoxynivalenol (DON), zearalenone (ZEA) and fumonisins B1 and B2 (FBs), was evaluated at an industrial-scale level by mechanical removal (sieving and density separation) of dust, coarse, small, broken, shriveled and low-density kernels and/or optical sorting of defected kernels. Samples were dynamically collected according to the Commission Regulation No. 401/2006 along the entire process line. Mycotoxin analyses of water-slurry aggregate samples were performed by validated LC methods. Depending on the contamination levels in raw incoming maize, the overall reduction rates ranged from 36 to 67% for DON, from 67 to 87% for ZEA and from 27 to 67% for FBs. High levels of DON, ZEA and FBs were found in all rejected fractions with values, respectively, up to 3030%, 1510% and 2680%, compared to their content in uncleaned maize. Results showed that grain cleaning equipment based on mechanical and or optical sorting technologies can provide a significant reduction in Fusarium toxin contamination in maize.
Keyphrases
  • health risk
  • risk assessment
  • heavy metals
  • high resolution
  • human health
  • wastewater treatment
  • escherichia coli
  • climate change
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • mass spectrometry