4.7 Article

Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) accumulation and allergenicity in response to nickel stress

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09107-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. PhD in Biology applied to Agriculture and Environment (DISTAV-Department of Earth, Environmental and Life Sciences University of Genoa, Italy) (XXXII cycle)
  2. Regione Liguria, Dipartimento Salute e Servizi Sociali

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Vegetables, including tomatoes, are a major source of nickel exposure. This study found that tomatoes uptake nickel from the environment, increasing the risk for human health. The presence of nickel in tomatoes can also alter the production of allergens, further increasing exposure risks for consumers.
Vegetables represent a major source of Ni exposure. Environmental contamination and cultural practices can increase Ni amount in tomato posing significant risk for human health. This work assesses the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum L.) response to Ni on the agronomic yield of fruits and the related production of allergens. Two cultivars were grown in pots amended with Ni 0, 30, 60, 120, and 300 mg kg(-1), respectively. XRF and ICP-MS analyses highlighted the direct increase of fruit Ni content compared to soil Ni, maintaining a stable biomass. Leaf water content increased at Ni 300 mg kg(-1). Total protein content and individual allergenic components were investigated using biochemical (RP-HPLC and N-terminal amino acid sequencing) and immunological (inhibition tests of IgE binding by SPHIAa assay on the FABER testing system) methodologies. Ni affected the fruit tissue concentration of pathogenesis-related proteins and relevant allergens (LTP, profilin, Bet v 1-like protein and TLP). This study elucidates for the first time that tomato reacts to exogenous Ni, uptaking the metal while changing its allergenic profiles, with potential double increasing of exposure risks for consumers. This evidence highlighted the importance of adequate choice of low-Ni tomato cultivars and practices to reduce Ni uptake by potentially contaminated matrices.

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