Published December 20, 2021 | Version v1
Publication

In vitro assessment of cyanotoxins bioaccessibility in raw and cooked mussels

Description

The oral route by ingestion of water and food contaminated with cyanotoxins is the main route of exposure to these toxins. This study addresses for the first time the bioaccessibility of some of the most common Microcystins (MC-LR, MC-RR and MC-YR) and Cylindrospermopsin (CYN) simultaneously in raw and steamed mussels spiked at 250 ng/g fresh weight of each cyanotoxin, after an in vitro digestion, including the salivary (incubation with artificial saliva, 30s), gastric (with pepsin, 2h, pH 2), duodenal (with pancreatin and bile salts, 2h, pH 6.5) and colonic phases (with lactic-acid bacteria, 48h, pH 7.2). The results obtained suggest that the potential absorption of these cyanotoxins by consumption of contaminated mussels is lower than expected. After the total effect of cooking and digestion, the mean bioaccessibility levels recorded were 24.65% (CYN), 31.51% (MC-RR), 17.51% (MC-YR) and 13.20% (MC-LR). Moreover, toxins were transferred to the steaming waters at 3.77 ± 0.24 μg L−1 CYN, 2.29 ± 0.13 μg L−1 MC-LR, 6.60 ± 0.25 μg L−1 MC-RR and 3.83 ± 0.22 μg L−1 MC-YR. These bioaccessibility results should be considered for a more accurate risk assessment related to these cyanotoxins in mussels, including the fact that the steaming waters could also represent a risk after human consumption.

Abstract

Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (AGL2015-64558-R, MINECO/FEDER, UE)

Additional details

Created:
December 5, 2022
Modified:
November 29, 2023