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Plant Physiol, July 2002, Vol. 129, pp. 929-930
THE HOT AND THE CLASSIC
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FUMONISIN MYCOTOXINS |
Fumonisins are mycotoxins
produced by Fusarium molds, most notably Fusarium
moniliforme (F. verticillioides) and
Fusarium proliferatum. These mycotoxins occur as
contaminants on agricultural products, particularly maize (Zea
mays), in the field or during storage, worldwide. More than 10 types of fumonisins have been isolated and characterized. The most
prevalent of these mycotoxins, which is also believed to be the most
toxic, is fumonisin B-1 (FB-1). The facts that fumonisins cause field
outbreaks of mycotoxicoses in animals, are carcinogenic in rats (and
probably humans), and disrupt sphingolipid metabolism, have resulted in
much recent interest in these compounds (Marasas, 2001 ).
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Discovery of Fumonisins |
Epidemiologists first raised the alarm that
Fusarium-infested maize may be dangerous to the health
of humans and livestock. A field outbreak of equine
leukoencephalomalacia in South Africa in 1970 was associated with a
high local incidence of F. moniliforme-infested maize.
This fungus was also found to be prevalent on maize consumed by people
in the Transkei region of South Africa, a high-incidence area for
esophageal cancer. A strain of F. moniliforme isolated from moldy maize in Transkei was shown to cause leukoencephalomalacia in horses, as well as porcine pulmonary edema in pigs and liver cancer
in rats. A short-term cancer initiation/promotion assay in rat liver
was used to purify the carcinogen(s) in the culture material.
These efforts finally met with success when FB-1, novel mycotoxin with
cancer-promoting activity in rat liver, was isolated from culture
material of F. moniliforme. Shortly thereafter,
high levels of fumonisins in the 1989 U.S. maize crop resulted in
large-scale field outbreaks of equine leukoencephalomalacia and porcine
pulmonary edema in the United States. Subsequently, the fumonisins were found to occur naturally in maize and maize-based food products worldwide (Marasas, 2001 ).
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Human Exposure to Fumonisin |
Humans are exposed to FB-1 primarily by the ingestion of
contaminated maize (de Nijs et al., 1998 ). Although contaminated maize
is the main culprit so far identified, there are increasing reports of
its occurrence in other moldy crops as well (Logrieco et al., 1998 ;
Martins et al., 2001 ). Most types of food processing do not affect the
overall toxic effect, and fumonisin is detectable in food products
ranging from corn flakes (De Girolamo et al., 2001 ) to beer (Hlywka and
Bullerman, 1999 ). Although generally heat stable, fumonisin
concentrations appear to decline as processing temperatures increase.
However, the loss of fumonisins that does occur during very
high-temperature processing is not necessarily a good thing: There is
concern that fumonisin breakdown products may be more toxic than
fumonisin itself (Bullerman et al., 2002 ).
Studies have shown that FB-1 intake is directly related to the quantity
of maize consumed (de Nijs et al., 1998 ). Literature results concerning
the occurrence of FB-1 in 349 samples of maize from 18 countries
worldwide demonstrated the presence of this mycotoxin in 93% of the
samples. The average contamination level was 1,359 ng of FB-1 per g of
maize. Human intake of FB-1 was estimated based on the maize
consumption of all people in the Netherlands in 1992. It was estimated
that 1% are exposed to an intake of at least 105 ng per
person per day, and 49% to an intake of at least 103 ng of
FB-1 per person per day.
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How Fumonisins Kill |
FB-1 structurally resembles sphingosine and is a specific
inhibitor of ceramide synthetase, a key enzyme involved in de novo sphingolipid biosynthesis and in the reacylation of free sphingoid bases derived from sphingolipid turnover (Riley et al., 2001 ). The most
profound biochemical consequences of fumonisin are increased levels of
free sphingoid bases and their 1-phosphates, and decreased ceramide
biosynthesis. When free sphingoid bases accumulate, cells that are
sensitive to sphingoid base-induced growth arrest will die and
insensitive cells will survive. If the cells selected to die are normal
phenotypes and the cells selected to survive are abnormal, then the
risk of cancer increases.
Some studies have indicated that the effects of FB-1 may be gender
specific. Howard et al. (2001) found that FB-1 induces renal
tubule tumors in male rats (Rattus norvegicus)
and hepatic tumors in female mice (Mus musculus).
Bhandari et al. (2001) confirmed the high susceptibility of female mice
to FB-1-induced hepatocarcinoma. The increased toxicity in females
correlated with a greater increase of sphinganine and sphingosine
levels in liver after FB-1 treatment compared to males.
Little is known about sphingolipids in plants, although available
information suggests that these compounds (ceramide, sphingosine, and
sphingosine-1-phosphate) may play important signaling roles in
plants (see review by Ng and Hetherington, 2001 ). There are already
suggestions that sphingolipid metabolites may be involved in such
diverse processes as pathogenesis, the regulation of membrane stability, and the response of plants to drought (Ng and Hetherington, 2001 ). It is not too surprising, therefore, that FB-1 has been found to
be highly toxic to plants (Abbas et al., 1992 ; Abbas et al., 1998 ;
Moore et al., 1999 ).
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Eat Your Bt Maize |
"Bt maize" refers to those maize cultivars
that have been genetically engineered to express genes from the
bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis that code for
insecticidal proteins. Mechanical damage to maize kernels by feeding
European corn borers (Ostrinia nubilalsi) often leads to
Fusarium infection in the field. Bt maize
hybrids have the potential to reduce fumonisin levels in field-harvested grain, by preventing the mechanical damage that results
from the feeding of Bt-susceptible insects on ear
tissues. Indeed, field experiments over the course of 3 years indicated that significantly less fumonisin occurred in Bt maize
compared with nontransgenic hybrids (Munkvold et al., 1999 ). For
example, in 1997, mean FB-1 concentrations in manually infested
treatments were 11.8 µg g 1 for nontransgenic and 1.3 µg g 1 for transgenic hybrids. The higher fumonisin
concentrations in nontransgenic hybrids were correlated with
higher European corn borer populations during the early reproductive
stages of the maize plants. These results indicate that under some
conditions, genetic engineering of maize for insect resistance may
enhance its safety for animal and human consumption. The
general conclusions reached by Munkvold et al. (1999) have subsequently
been confirmed by a number of independent researchers (Masoero et al.,
1999 ; Dowd, 2000 , 2001 ; Bakan et al., 2002 ): Genetically modified
Bt maize is a healthier food alternative compared with
traditional, nontransgenic, cultivars.
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FOOTNOTES |
www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/doi/10.1104/pp.900040.
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LITERATURE CITED |
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Gender-related differences in subacute fumonisin B-1 hepatotoxicity in BALB/c mice.
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Nutritive value, mycotoxin contamination and in vitro rumen fermentation of normal and genetically modified corn (Cry 1A(B)) grown in northern Italy.
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Munkvold GP, Hellmich RL, Rice LG
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Ng CKY, Hetherington AM
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Sphingolipid-mediated signalling in plants.
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Riley RT, Enongene E, Voss KA, Norred WP, Meredith FI, Sharma RP, Spitsbergen J, Williams DE, Carlson DB, Merrill AH Jr
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Sphingolipid perturbations as mechanisms for fumonisin carcinogenesis.
Environ Health Perspect
109/2: 301-308
Peter V. Minorsky
Department of Natural Sciences Mercy College Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522
© 2002 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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