软骨藻酸、冈田酸和螺内酯:污染和烹饪效应的种间变异。

C. Picot, G. Limon, G. Durand, N. Wesolek, D. Parent-Massin, A. Roudot
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引用次数: 16

摘要

研究了软骨藻酸(DA)、冈田酸及其类似物(OAs)和螺内酯(SPX)在贻贝、牡蛎、贝、地毯蛤和蛏子蛤中污染的种间变异性。采用高效液相色谱-紫外(UV)法和高效液相色谱-串联质谱(HPLC-MS/MS)法测定DA浓度;采用HPLC-MS/MS法测定OAs和SPX。观察结果表明,每种藻毒素的污染率都具有物种依赖性,受污染最严重的物种因藻毒素的种类而异。对于DA和SPX,蛤贝似乎是最受污染的物种,而贻贝似乎是OAs的主要媒介。通过对5种不同双壳类动物生肉和熟肉中毒素浓度的比较,研究了蒸煮过程对其DA浓度的影响。DA浓度在煮熟的蛤贝和蛏子中降低,而在煮熟的贻贝、地毯蛤和蛤蚌中升高。因此,烹饪的影响是依赖于双壳类物种的。对于OAs和SPX,研究了贻贝的烹饪过程,由于它们的亲脂性,导致毒素浓度增加。这些结果应该在暴露评估和监管监测计划的设计中加以考虑,因为目前基于生双壳类的禁止水平可能会在食用煮熟的贝类时过度或不足地保护消费者。
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Domoic acid, okadaic acid and spirolides: inter-species variability in contamination and cooking effects.
The inter-species variability of contamination by domoic acid (DA), okadaic acid and analogues (OAs) and spirolides (SPX) in mussels, oysters, cockles, carpet shell clams and razor clams was assessed. DA concentrations were measured using both high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with Ultra Violet (UV) detection and HPLC cou- pled with tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS); OAs and SPX were measured using HPLC-MS/MS. Observations showed that for each phycotoxin, the contamination rates are species-dependent and the most contaminated species differ according to the kind of phycotoxin. For DA and SPX, cockles appear to be the most contaminated species whereas mus- sels seem to be the predominant vector for OAs. The effect of cooking process on DA concentrations was investigated in five different bivalve species by comparing toxin concentrations in whole raw flesh with concentrations in whole cooked flesh. The DA concentration decreased in cooked cockles and razor clams whereas it increased in cooked mussels, carpet shell clams and donax. Thus the impact of cooking is bivalve species-dependent. For OAs and SPX, the cooking process was studied on mussels and resulted in an increase in the toxin concentration because of their lipophilic nature. These re- sults should be taken into consideration in exposure assessments and in the design of regulatory monitoring programs, as the current banning levels based on raw bivalves may over- or under-protect consumers when shellfish are eaten cooked.
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