Abstract

Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites that are produced by molds during their development. According to fungal physiological particularities, mycotoxins can contaminate crops before harvest or during storage. Among toxins that represent a real public health issue, those produced by Fusarium genus in cereals before harvest are of great importance since they are the most frequent in European productions. Among them, deoxynivalenol (DON) and fumonisins (FUM) frequently contaminate maize. In recent years, numerous studies have investigated whether food processing techniques can be exploited to reduce the levels of these two mycotoxins, which would allow the identification and quantification of parameters affecting mycotoxin stability. The particularity of the popcorn process is that it associates heat treatment with a particular physical phenomenon (i.e., expansion). Three methods exist to implement the popcorn transformation process: hot air, hot oil, and microwaves, all of which are tested in this study. The results show that all popping modes significantly reduce FUM contents in both Mushroom and Butterfly types of popcorn. The mean initial contamination of 1351 µg/kg was reduced by 91% on average after popping. For DON, the reduction was less important despite a lower initial contamination than for FUM (560 µg/kg). Only the hot oil popping for the Mushroom type significantly reduced the contamination up to 78% compared to unpopped controls. Hot oil popping appears to provide the most important reduction for the two considered mycotoxins for both types of popcorn (−98% and −58% average reduction for FUM and DON, respectively).

Highlights

  • Popcorn has the particularity of popping at a high temperature

  • Different food processing methods and parameters such as temperature have been tested on their ability to reduce mycotoxin content, no studies have focused heretofore on how popping affects these contaminants

  • The present work focuses on how three popcorn-popping methods affect the DON and FUM contents of the popcorn

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Summary

Introduction

Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/).Mycotoxins are secondary metabolites synthesized by numerous fungal species. Of special importance are molds of the genus Fusarium because they colonize cereals before harvest and may produce some toxins of major importance for food safety such as deoxynivalenol (DON) and fumonisins (FUM). Rodrigues and Naehrer estimated, through a global worldwide study, the prevalence at 72% for DON and 60% for FUM in corn samples from Central Europe [1]. More widely, Gruber-Dorninger, Jenkins, and Schatzmayr, in a

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