Abstract

Orellanine (OR) toxin is produced by mushrooms of the genus Cortinarius which grow in North America and in Europe. OR poisoning is characterized by severe oliguric acute renal failure, with a mortality rate of 10%–30%. Diagnosis of OR poisoning currently hinges on a history of ingestion of Cortinarius mushrooms and histopathology of renal biopsies. A key step in the diagnostic approach is analysis of tissues for OR. Currently, tissue-based analytical methods for OR are nonspecific and lack sensitivity. The objectives of this study were: (1) to develop definitive HPLC and LC-MS/MS tissue-based analytical methods for OR; and (2) to investigate toxicological effects of OR in mice. The HPLC limit of quantitation was 10 µg/g. For fortification levels of 15 µg/g to 50 µg/g OR in kidney, the relative standard deviation was between 1.3% and 9.8%, and accuracy was within 1.5% to 7.1%. A matrix-matched calibration curve was reproduced in this range with a correlation coefficient (r) of 0.97–0.99. The limit of detection was 20 ng/g for LC-MS/MS. In OR-injected mice, kidney OR concentrations were 97 ± 51 µg/g on Day 0 and 17 ± 1 µg/g on termination Day 3. Splenic and liver injuries were novel findings in this mouse model. The new tissue-based analytical tests will improve diagnosis of OR poisoning, while the mouse model has yielded new data advancing knowledge on OR-induced pathology. The new tissue-based analytical tests will improve diagnosis of OR poisoning, while the mouse model has yielded new data advancing knowledge on OR-induced pathology.

Highlights

  • Orellanine is a potent natural bipyridyl toxin produced by Cortinarius mushrooms, which grow throughout Europe and parts of North America

  • Significant lesions were observed in the renal cortex of all examined OR treated mice and included variable degeneration and necrosis of the tubular epithelium with regeneration, tubular

  • Significant lesions were observed in the renal cortex of all examined treated mice and included ectasia, tubular proteinosis

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Summary

Introduction

Orellanine is a potent natural bipyridyl toxin produced by Cortinarius mushrooms, which grow throughout Europe and parts of North America. Cortinarius orellanus and C. rubellus are the major orellanine-containing mushrooms which are responsible for causing human intoxications. In these mushrooms, orellanine occurs mainly in form of its mono- and diglucoside [1]. The toxicity of Cortinarius mushrooms was first recognized in 1957 in Poland [2]. About 102 individuals were intoxicated by ingesting C. orellanus, 10% of whom died [2,3]. Acute renal failure (ARF) is the major presentation of Cortinarius human mushroom poisoning, but liver injury has

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