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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, May 1999, p. 1854-1857, Vol. 65, No. 5
University of Greenwich,
Received 4 August 1998/Accepted 3 March 1999
We tested a novel colorimetric toxicity test, based on inhibition
of
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
A Colorimetric Technique for Detecting
Trichothecenes and Assessing Relative Potencies

-galactosidase activity in the yeast
Kluyveromyces marxianus, for sensitivity to a range
of mycotoxins. A variety of trichothecene mycotoxins could be detected.
The order of toxicity established with this bioassay was verrucarin
A > roridin A > T-2 toxin > diacetoxyscirpenol > HT-2 toxin > acetyl T-2 toxin > neosolaniol > fusarenon X > T-2 triol > scirpentriol > nivalenol > deoxynivalenol > T-2 tetraol. The sensitivity
of detection was high, with the most potent trichothecene tested,
verrucarin A, having a 50% effective concentration (concentration of
toxin causing 50% inhibition) of 2 ng/ml. Other mycotoxins
(cyclopiazonic acid, fumonisin B1, ochratoxin A, patulin,
sterigmatocystin, tenuazonic acid, and zearalenone) could
not be detected at up to 10 µg/ml, nor could aflatoxins
B1 and M1 be detected at
concentrations up to 25 µg/ml. This test should be useful for
trichothecene detection and for studies of relevant interactions
both
between trichothecenes themselves and between trichothecenes and other
food constituents.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: University of
Greenwich, Wellington St., Woolwich, London SE18 6PF, United
Kingdom. Phone: 0181-331-8214. Fax: 0181 331 8305. E-mail:
I.H.Evans{at}gre.ac.uk.
Present address: Respiratory and Systemic Infection Laboratory,
Central Public Health Laboratory, London NW9 5HT, United Kingdom.
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