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Original Articles

The ecological context of pyrrolizidine alkaloids in food, feed and forage: an overview

Pages 260-281 | Received 09 Jul 2010, Accepted 22 Dec 2010, Published online: 25 Feb 2011
 

Abstract

Plant-produced 1,2-dehydropyrrolizidine ester alkaloids and their N-oxides (PAs) not only cause acute poisoning of humans and livestock, but also the likely harmful cryptic effects of chronic exposure pose particular food safety risks that need to be addressed for consumer protection. In natural contexts, however, PAs cause few or no problems. Rather, these plant secondary metabolites are important elements of ecosystems and plant–animal relationships; the existence and persistence of many PA-adapted organisms, in various ways, depends on the presence of PA-containing plants or even on PAs as such. PA plants are widely distributed among unrelated families of the plant kingdom; there is great structural diversity of PAs, and the amounts of PAs produced are subject to great variation due to multiple causes. These realities, coupled with many deficiencies in our scientific understanding, make the presence and roles of PAs in nature a subject with limited potential for valid generalisations and predictions, and complex and difficult to summarise. PAs, their producer plants and their users are integral parts of ecosystems worldwide, and we have to learn to live with these allelochemicals by accepting the presence of some harmful natural chemicals in the environment and by taking regulatory action to reduce health risks to humans. Regulations for consumer protection are long overdue. However, any such measures must be flexible enough to accommodate the findings of future research. Transdisciplinary efforts are required to fill gaps in the knowledge and to come up with additional means to monitor the presence of PAs in food and feed.

Acknowledgements

This paper is based on a paper presented at the DG SANCO-JRC Workshop on Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids in Food and Feed, Brussells, Belgium, 22 February 2010. The author is very grateful to many collaborators, in particular to the late Dietrich Schneider, Dick Vane-Wright, Stefan Schulz, John Edgar, Steve Colegate, and to my current and previous laboratory crews. John Edgar, Steve Colegate, Dick Vane-Wright and Tim Thoden gave valuable comments on an earlier draft of this manuscript, Lukas Seehausen kindly provided a photograph (). The author is also greatly indebted to anonymous reviewers for valuable criticism and suggestions.

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