Title: Poisonous Plants, Fungi, and Algae
1Poisonous Plants, Fungi, and Algae
2Fungal toxins
- Fungi produce a tremendous diversity of toxic
compounds - Mushroom toxins formed in the fleshy fruiting
bodies of higher fungi - Mycotoxins formed by hyphae of common molds
growing under a variety of conditions
3Mycotoxins
- Mycotoxins produced by many fungi growing in
contaminated foods and other substrates. - Generally, the highest levels in substrates with
high water activity and warm temperatures. - Can develop in grains or nuts in the field due to
activities of pathogenic as well as saprobic
fungi on the living plant - Forage grass may contain mycotoxins because of a
pathogenic fungus or a fungal endophyte
4Mycotoxins
- More commonly -- mycotoxins develop in storage
and remain within the food after processing and
cooking - Many common indoor environmental contaminants are
toxigenic - able to produce toxins - Some studies revealed significant levels of
airborne mycotoxins in occupational settings,
offices, and even homes
5Health effects of mycotoxins
- Acute and chronic effects on both humans and
livestock - Mycotoxins are believed to be among the most
potent known carcinogens - Majority of research focused on health effects
following ingestion of contaminated food - Effect range from immediate toxic responses and
immunosupression to potential long-term
teratogenic, estrogenic, and carcinogenic
effects. - Possible health effects due to airborne exposure
(exposure to airborne spores with mycotoxins)
6History of mycotoxins
- Turkey X disease killed over 100,000 young
turkeys in 1960 in England - Affected turkeys stopped eating, became
lethargic, suffered hemorrhages under the skin,
and died - Autopsies showed livers had undergone extensive
necrosis, kidneys developed lesions - Partridges, pheasants, ducklings, and other
animals also affected - Only factor in common with all the cases was
Brazilian peanut meal as a feed supplement. - Toxin isolated from feed associated with fungal
contaminant Aspergillus flavus
7Aflatoxins
- Aflatoxin A (aspergillus) - fla (flavus) - toxin
- Four toxins soon identified aflatoxin B1, B2,
G1, G2 - (B and G refer to blue or green
florescence under uv-light) - Today known to be 10 aflatoxins
- Aflatoxin B1 most important - highly carcinogenic
and widespread occurrence in foods
8Sources of aflatoxins
- Produced by 3 species of Aspergillus A. flavus,
A. parasiticus, A. nomius - Aspergillus flavus a common fungus that occurs on
grains and legumes - A. parasiticus most toxigenic species
- Aflatoxins not only toxic but also carcinogenic,
mutagenic, and teratogenic
9Effects of aflatoxins
- Toxic effects clearly shown in India in 1974 when
hundreds were poisoned by eating corn containing
aflatoxins and 106 people died - Even when levels not toxic, prolonged exposure
caused liver cancer in every species of lab
animal tested - Believed responsible for high rates of liver
cancer in population groups in Asia and Africa
where contaminated food is often consumed - Most important crops - peanuts and corn
10Aflatoxin B1 is Mutagenic
- Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major cause
of mortality in certain areas of the world - About 50 of the HCC cases in parts of the world
where food is contaminated with AFB1show a
mutation in codon 249 of p53 tumor suppressor
gene - Mutation consists of transversion of G-gtT in the
third position of codon resulting in serine
instead of arginine - lab studies confirm
11Aflatoxins in corn
- Contamination occurs both in the field before
harvest and in storage - Most researchers agree is that if the
contamination is prevented before harvest the
problem can be managed - Emphasis is placed on preventing A flavus
infections of the corn by developing disease
resistant varieties and also by insect control to
prevent initial infections at wound sites
12Aflatoxin levels
- Levels permissible in foods subject to legal
limits in many countries - Today, foods most frequently contaminated,
routinely screened before processing or sale - Permissible limits generally quite low (15-20
parts per billion in US - lower in Europe) for
human food - Some scientists feel that no detectable levels of
aflatoxins should be permitted because of the
carcinogenic effects
13Economic impact
- Because of enforced limits the presence of
aflatoxins can have serious economic implications - In 1980 nearly 66 of random corn samples from
North Carolina had concentrations exceeding 20
ppb resulting in a 31 million loss to producers
and handlers - When cows and goats are fed grains contaminated
with aflatoxins, they produce milk with
aflatoxins - as a result, limits exist for
livestock feed but not as low
14Average yearly level of aflatoxin contamination
from corn grown along the coastal plain of Georgia
15Economics and health
- In US most corn goes to animal feed so aflatoxin
exposure are not as much of a problem as in other
countries - In many countries in Africa, Central and South
America and Mexico corn is a primary staple for
human food and many people are exposed to
aflatoxin levels above the standard - In Benin - mean levels 37 ppb
- In Nigeria - mean levels 292 ppb
16Aflatoxin production
- Aflatoxins are produced under certain conditions
but only by some strains - Nontoxigenic strains of A. flavus used to prepare
fermented foods in the orient
17Other mycotoxins
- Today over 400 mycotoxins have been identified
from 150 species of fungi with new ones
discovered each year - Species of Aspergillus, Penicillium, Fusarium,
Alternaria, Cladosporium and Stachybotrys form
mycotoxins
18Mycotoxin production
- Can occur in one strain of a species, other
strains of the same species not toxigenic - Fungi from air samples in homes tested for
mycotoxin production using tissue culture of
human fibroblast cells - In multiple isolates of a single species (up to
12) some produced mycotoxins, others did not - Warm temperatures and abundant moisture promote
mycotoxin production
19Common toxigenic fungi
Aspergillus
Penicillium
Stachybotrys
Fusarium
20Ochratoxins
- Produced by species of Aspergillus such as
Aspergillus ochraceus - Most important is Penicillium verrucosum which
occurs on grains - Ochratoxin A a nephrotoxin responsible for
nephropathy in pigs and probably humans - It is immunosuppressive and also assumed to be
carcinogenic in humans - in animal studies it is
one of the strongest carcinogens
21Patulin
- Produced by a number of species of Penicillium,
Aspergillus and Byssochlamys. - Most important producer is Penicillium expansum.
- Fungus causes a soft rot of apples toxin found
in apple juice - Patulin first attracted attention as an
antibiotic in 1943 no current interest in
antibiotic properties because it is too toxic
22Trichothecenes
- Produced by several species of Fusarium
- One of the most toxic is T-2
- Believed T-2 responsible for outbreak of
alimentary toxic aleukia (ATA) in Siberia during
and after World War II - In some areas 10 of the population developed the
disease and in most cases it was fatal
23Alimentary Toxic Aleukia - ATA
- Characterized by nausea, vomiting, hemorrhages in
many organs, bleeding from nose and throat,
bloody diarrhea, low leukocyte count, exhaustion
of bone marrow - About a third of deaths due to strangulation from
internal swelling of throat - Years later scientists made the connection
between the disease and consumption of moldy
grain - Symptoms appeared when people ate 2 kg of moldy
grain, 6 kg was lethal. Similar hemorrhagic
syndrome in animals called moldy corn toxicosis
24Vomitoxin (Deoxynivalenol)
- A trichothecene produced by some Fusarium spp.
- Produces vomiting in pigs at low concentrations
- Much less toxic than T-2 but immunosuppressive
- Contaminates corn, barley, and wheat
- Permissible limits are 0.3 ppm for flour and 0.1
ppm in bread or breakfast cereal - During recent wet growing season, Ontario farmers
lost 17 million on a wheat harvest contaminated
with vomitoxin.
25Macrocyclic trichothecenes
- More toxic than T-2
- Produced by Stachybotrys chartarum (S. atra) and
also by species of Myrothecium - Specific toxins are satratoxins, verrucarins, and
roridins - Fungi are cellulose decomposers and found growing
on hay or straw stored under poor conditions.
26Macrocyclic trichothecenes
- Responsible for the deaths of many horses, but it
can also affect cattle, pigs, sheep, poultry - Complex of unpleasant symptoms like ATA.
- Stachybotrys found indoors in many locations
growing on ceiling tiles and wallboard - Concern about airborne inhalation of spores
27Yellow rain
- During the Vietnam war, there was concern that
the Viet Cong were using chemical weapons against
the US as well as the population in Laos and
Cambodia - Victims were sprayed with a yellow rain
- Symptoms were like ATA (possibly some evidence of
trichothecene toxins in some of the victims.
However, the issue was not clear cut) - Little evidence Viet Cong using chemical weapons
- Samples of the yellow rain deposits later shown
to be largely made up of pollen - cleansing
flight theory - This issue has never been resolved
28Zearalenone
- Produced by species of Fusarium found in moldy
corn - Chronic exposure is estrogenic
- Female pigs especially sensitive causing
vulvovaginitis. - Swelling of the vulva, enlargement of the mammary
glands, enlargement of the uterus, and vaginal
prolapse. - In lower levels causes infertility, stillbirths,
and small litters
29Fumonisins
- Produced by several Fusarium species on moldy
corn possibly other fungi as well - First discovered in 1988
- Implicated in cases of esophageal cancer in
humans and other cancer in farm animals - Shown to disrupt sphingolipid metabolism
(involved in membrane structure) - Implicated in birth defects relating to neural
tube abnormalities
30Exposure in Contaminated Environments
- Beginning in late 1980s scientists began raising
the issue of possible inhalant exposure - Mycotoxins are not volatile but they are present
in fungal spores - In contaminated indoor environments, people may
be inhaling hundreds to thousands of fungal
spores per hour - If the spore are toxigenic, risks may occur
31Indoor Fungi
- Indoor spores generally reflects outdoors unless
there is a source of contamination - Many different types of fungi occur
- Most common genus is Cladosporium - just like it
is outdoors - BUT Penicillium and Aspergillus often exist at
higher concentrations indoors - Stachybotrys has received most media attention
over the past 4 years
32Cladosporium
- Common fungal genus occurring both indoors and
outdoors - Most abundant outdoor spore type with a worldwide
distribution - Normally exists as a saprobe or weak plant
pathogen - Spores are known to be allergenic
33Cladosporium on diffuser
34Penicillium
- One of the most common soil fungi in natural
environment - Over 250 species
- Well known allergen
- Some species produce mycotoxins
- Produce VOCs
35Penicillium in culture
36Aspergillus
- Also common soil fungus and cause rot of stored
grain - Over 150 species
- Well known allergens
- Several species form mycotoxins
- Some species can grow at high temperatures
- Several species can cause human infections of
lung and hypersensitivity pneumonitis
37Penicillium and Aspergillus
- Small spores passively aerosolized when spore
clusters disturbed - Spores extremely buoyant, remain airborne for
extended time
38Stachybotrys
- Soil fungus in nature
- Commonly found indoors on wet materials
containing cellulose, such as wallboard, jute,
wicker, straw baskets, and paper materials - Spores in slimy mass
- Thought to be allergenic although little is known
- May produce potent mycotoxins
39Stachybotrys
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42Health effects from airborne exposure?
- Clinical studies not completed yet
- Possible correlations in contaminated buildings
but no experimental studies with human exposure - Animal studies suggest effects of respiratory
exposure important - Possible effects immune suppression, rash,
headache, fatigue, sore throat, pulmonary
hemorrhage (in infants) - We need more research