4.7 Article

New Insights into the Deposition of Zearalenone in Minipigs: A Suitable Bioindicator for Internal Exposure

Journal

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c05159

Keywords

zearalenone; toxicokinetics; metabolism; minipig; bioindicator; mitigation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. Innovation Program of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Science
  3. China Agriculture Research System
  4. [31872394]

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Research on the ADME of ZEN in Bama Aroma pigs revealed that ZEN is mainly metabolized into alpha-Zearalenol and both are found in conjugated forms in plasma, urine, and bile. The concentration and composition of ZEN and its metabolites were tissue-specific, suggesting different roles in ZEN metabolism for the small intestine, liver, kidney, and lung.
The detrimental footprint of mycotoxins in agriculture and on animal production has been widely recognized, especially in swine. Despite an increased number of research evaluating the toxicokinetics of mycotoxins in animal organisms, the absorption, distribution, metabolization, and excretion (ADME) patterns of zearalenone (ZEN) need further understanding. Furthermore, in vivo bioindicator for ZEN exposure in individual pigs has yet to be characterized. This study explored the ADME of ZEN in Bama Aroma pigs, a Chinese miniature pig breed, that has been used herein as a swine model. The findings revealed that ZEN was mainly metabolized into alpha-zearalenol (alpha-ZOL), and both ZEN and alpha-ZOL were mostly found in conjugated forms in the plasma, urine, and bile. The concentration and composition patterns of ZEN and its metabolites were tissue-specific, implying that the small intestine, liver, kidney, and lung play different roles in ZEN metabolism. The plasma concentrations of ZEN + alpha-ZOL highly correlated (R2 = 0.993) with the ZEN dietary exposure and may be utilized as a bioindicator to investigate animal exposure and mitigation efficacy of mycotoxin detoxifiers. This research would provide both fundamental information and a useful animal model for ZEN toxicity and detoxification studies.

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