4.7 Article

Degradation of Four Major Mycotoxins by Eight Manganese Peroxidases in Presence of a Dicarboxylic Acid

Journal

TOXINS
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/toxins11100566

Keywords

manganese peroxidase; mycotoxin; aflatoxin; zearalenone; deoxynivalenol; fumonisin; detoxification

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFD050140902]
  2. Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Project [CAAS-XTCX2016011]
  3. National Chicken Industry Technology System of China [CARS-41]
  4. Elite Youth Program of Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences

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Enzymatic treatment is an attractive method for mycotoxin detoxification, which ideally prefers the use of one or a few enzymes. However, this is challenged by the diverse structures and co-contamination of multiple mycotoxins in food and feed. Lignin-degrading fungi have been discovered to detoxify organics including mycotoxins. Manganese peroxidase (MnP) is a major enzyme responsible for lignin oxidative depolymerization in such fungi. Here, we demonstrate that eight MnPs from different lignocellulose-degrading fungi (five from Irpex lacteus, one from Phanerochaete chrysosporium, one from Ceriporiopsis subvermispora, and another from Nematoloma frowardii) could all degrade four major mycotoxins (aflatoxin B-1, AFB(1); zearalenone, ZEN; deoxynivalenol, DON; fumonisin B-1, FB1) only in the presence of a dicarboxylic acid malonate, in which free radicals play an important role. The I. lacteus and C. subvermispora MnPs behaved similarly in mycotoxins transformation, outperforming the P. chrysosporium and N. frowardii MnPs. The large evolutionary diversity of these MnPs suggests that mycotoxin degradation tends to be a common feature shared by MnPs. MnP can, therefore, serve as a candidate enzyme for the degradation of multiple mycotoxins in food and feed if careful surveillance of the residual toxicity of degradation products is properly carried out.

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