Abstract

Mycotoxins are a group of compounds produced by various fungi and excreted into the matrices on which they grow, often food intended for human consumption or animal feed. The high toxicity and carcinogenicity of these compounds and their ability to cause various pathological conditions has led to widespread screening of foods and feeds potentially polluted with them. Maximum permissible levels in different matrices have also been established for some toxins. As these are quite low, analytical methods for determination of mycotoxins have to be both sensitive and specific. In addition, an appropriate sample preparation and pre-concentration method is needed to isolate analytes from rather complicated samples. In this article, an overview of methods for analysis and sample preparation published in the last ten years is given for the most often encountered mycotoxins in different samples, mainly in food. Special emphasis is on liquid chromatography with fluorescence and mass spectrometric detection, while in the field of sample preparation various solid-phase extraction approaches are discussed. However, an overview of other analytical and sample preparation methods less often used is also given. Finally, different matrices where mycotoxins have to be determined are discussed with the emphasis on their specific characteristics important for the analysis (human food and beverages, animal feed, biological samples, environmental samples). Various issues important for accurate qualitative and quantitative analyses are critically discussed: sampling and choice of representative sample, sample preparation and possible bias associated with it, specificity of the analytical method and critical evaluation of results.

Highlights

  • Awareness of mycotoxins has grown mainly in the last fifty years since the discovery of aflatoxins in the 1960s, they have accompanied mankind from the very beginnings and were probably associated with several mysterious diseases known from history [1]

  • Mycotoxins are a group of compounds produced by various fungi and excreted into the matrices on which they grow, often food intended for human consumption or animal feed

  • The aim of the present review is to present the state-of-the-art of the conventional and emerging analytical and sample preparation methods for the most important mycotoxins in various matrices where they may be encountered

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Summary

Introduction

Awareness of mycotoxins has grown mainly in the last fifty years since the discovery of aflatoxins in the 1960s, they have accompanied mankind from the very beginnings and were probably associated with several mysterious diseases known from history [1]. Mycotoxins are recognized as prevalently toxic compounds produced as secondary metabolites by various fungi and excreted into their substrates. These substrates frequently include plants grown and stored for human or animal consumption as well as processed food. Special emphasis is on the pitfalls of the mycotoxin analysis and the errors that may be inherent or introduced in each step of the analytical method. As this is a very broad scope, the review covers only the methods and techniques published in the last decade

Diversity and impact of mycotoxins
Diversity of samples containing mycotoxins
Screening methods
Immunoassay-based methods
Sensors and biosensors
Other direct screening methods
Indirect screening methods
Sample preparation and pre-concentration
Solvent extraction
Solid-phase extraction
Other extraction techniques
Other sample preparation techniques
Analytical methods
High performance liquid chromatography with other types of detection
Other analytical methods
Determination of mycotoxins in various matrices
Methodology
Pitfalls of mycotoxin analysis
Metabolites and other transformation products
Choice of the representative sample
Sample preparation bias
Analytical method bias
Findings
Conclusions
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