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Original Articles

Influence of temperature and pH on the degradation of deoxynivalenol (DON) in aqueous medium: comparative cytotoxicity of DON and degraded product

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Pages 121-131 | Received 08 Jul 2013, Accepted 28 Oct 2013, Published online: 14 Jan 2014
 

Abstract

Deoxynivalenol (DON), a toxic fungal metabolite, is stable under different processing conditions; however, its stability in aqueous medium at different temperatures and low pH (1–2) (present in the gastrointestinal tract) has not been investigated. In the present study, DON standard was used to study the influence of temperature and pH on DON stability in aqueous medium, the characterisation of the degraded product, and the comparative toxicity profile of the degraded and the parent compound. The results suggest that standard DON was unstable at 125–250°C showing 16–100% degradation whereas DON at pH 1–3 had 30–66% degradation, with a concomitant increase in the formation of a degraded product. Further ESI-MS characterisation of the dominant precursor ion of the HPLC eluate of the DON-degraded product was found to be m/z 279, resembling the known metabolite DOM-1. The degraded product of DON was reconfirmed as DOM-1 by comparison with standard DOM-1 and both gave a similar λmax at 208 nm. Comparative studies of both standard DOM-1 and the degraded product of DON showed no cytotoxicity up to 6400 ng ml–1 while significant cytotoxicity was observed for DON (400 ng ml–1). The results suggest that a highly acidic environment (pH 1–2) could be responsible for the de-epoxydation of DON leading to the formation of DOM-1.

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to the Director of their institute for his keen interest in the study. They gratefully acknowledge the Central Drug Research Institute, Lucknow, for providing the ESI-MS facility. The manuscript is IITR communication # 3163.

Funding

S.M. is thankful to the University Grant Commission (UGC), New Delhi, for the award of a Senior Research Fellowship. Financial assistance from the CSIR Network [project number NWP-17] is duly acknowledged.

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