Analysis of Mycotoxin and Secondary Metabolites in Commercial and Traditional Slovak Cheese Samples

Authors

  • Luana Izzo Department of Pharmacy, University of Naples “Federico II”, Via Domenico Montesano 49, 80131 Naples, Italy.
  • Petra Mikusova Department of Cryptogams, Plant Science and Biodiversity Center, Institute of Botany, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Dúbravská Cesta 9, SK-84523 Bratislava, Slovakia
  • Sonia Lombardi Department of Pharmacy, University of Naples “Federico II”, Via Domenico Montesano 49, 80131 Naples, Italy.
  • Michael Sulyok Department of Agrobiotechnology (IFA-Tulln), Institute of Bioanalytics and Agro-Metabolomics, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, Konrad Lorenzstr. 20, A-3430 Tulln, Austria.
  • Alberto Ritieni Department of Pharmacy, University of Naples “Federico II”, Via Domenico Montesano 49, 80131 Naples, Italy.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-5547-768-2/CH16

Keywords:

Mycotoxins, Slovak cheeses, fungi growth, enniatin B, tryptophol

Abstract

Cheese represents a dairy product extremely inclined to fungal growth and mycotoxin production. The growth of fungi belonging to Aspergillus, Penicillium, Fusarium, Claviceps, Alternaria, and Trichoderma genera in or on cheese leads to undesirable changes able to affect the quality of the final products. In the present investigation, a total of 68 types of commercial and traditional Slovak cheeses were analyzed to investigate the occurrence of fungal metabolites. Altogether, 13 fungal metabolites were identified and quantified. Aflatoxin M1, the only mycotoxin regulated in milk and dairy products, was not detected in any case. However, the presence of metabolites that have never been reported in cheeses, such as tryptophol at a maximum concentration level from 13.4 to 7930 \(\mu g/kg\) (average: 490 \(\mu g/kg\)), was recorded. Out of all detected metabolites, enniatin B represents the most frequently detected mycotoxin (0.06–0.71 \(\mu g/kg\)) in the analyzed samples. Attention is drawn to the lack of data on mycotoxins’ origin from Slovak cheeses; in fact, this is the first reported investigation. Our results indicate the presence of fungal mycotoxin contamination for which maximum permissible levels are not established, highlighting the importance of monitoring the source and producers of contamination in order to protect consumers’ health.

Published

2022-06-14

How to Cite

Luana Izzo, Petra Mikusova, Sonia Lombardi, Michael Sulyok, & Alberto Ritieni. (2022). Analysis of Mycotoxin and Secondary Metabolites in Commercial and Traditional Slovak Cheese Samples. Mycotoxins: An Under-Evaluated Risk for Human Health, 223–235. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-5547-768-2/CH16