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Featured researches published by S.C. Duarte.


Food Microbiology | 2010

A review on ochratoxin A occurrence and effects of processing of cereal and cereal derived food products.

S.C. Duarte; Angelina Pena; Celeste M. Lino

Ochratoxin A (OTA) continues to grab global attention and concern for the hazard and impact that embody for both human and animals, based on its toxicity and occurrence. Despite OTA has been described in a myriad of foodstuffs, cereal and its derivatives remain the major contributors to OTA exposure. For that reason, a critical review on OTA occurrence reported by recent studies worldwide focusing on unprocessed and processed cereal foodstuffs is made in this work. Special attention is drawn to the major cereal derived products, namely flour, bread, breakfast cereals, baby/infant foods and the inherently involved technological food processing methods and its influence on the redistribution and chemical modification of OTA. The paper further examines the factors that influence the OTA content of cereal and its derived products, explicitly the different ecological niches of the ochratoxigenic mycobiota -Aspergillus spp. and Penicillium verrucosum, the agricultural practice involved, harvest procedures and storage conditions, the type of grain, and the nature and extent of technological processing as well as the ultimate stages of analytical quality level of the sampling and analysis of the suspected ingredients or foods.


Critical Reviews in Toxicology | 2011

Human ochratoxin a biomarkers--from exposure to effect.

S.C. Duarte; Angelina Pena; Celeste M. Lino

Ochratoxin A (OTA) is a nephrotoxic mycotoxin that has received particular attention because of the toxic effects, widespread occurrence in contaminated food and feed chain, suspected causal effect on nephropathies, and, more recently, possibility of exposure by inhalation in domicile and occupational settings. Biomarkers have been used not only to ascertain the role of OTA in inducing chronic renal failure diseases, but also as a means to portray general populations’ risk to the mycotoxin. Biomonitoring can thus be used to assess internal OTA exposure, with no need to recognize the main source of exposure. And so it presents undeniable advantages over the monitoring of external dose. With a just right understanding of biomarkers, it is possible to follow the trail from exposure right to effect, and so contribute both to surveillance plans and etiological studies. In recognition of the long serum half-life and the renal elimination of OTA, most of the studies present serum/plasma and/or urine analyses as markers of exposure. In this review and for each of these main matrices, a comparison over the advantages and disadvantages is offered. Although currently limited, an overview of the current knowledge on OTA biomarkers and the influential role of the individual characteristics, namely gender and age, along with season and geographical location is given. Attention is also given to the ongoing debate over the existence of OTA-DNA adducts, a biomarker of effective dose regarded as an alternative to biomarkers of internal dose. Although unspecific, OTA effect biomarkers are also reviewed.


Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2010

Mycotoxin food and feed regulation and the specific case of ochratoxin A: a review of the worldwide status

S.C. Duarte; Celeste M. Lino; Angelina Pena

Mycotoxins are naturally occurring contaminants whose presence in food- and feedstuffs cannot be completely avoided. The safety and economic impact arising from the commercialization of mycotoxin-contaminated food and feed supply chain is considerable and acknowledged. To protect consumers from mycotoxin-derived health risks, many countries have adopted regulations or guidelines to limit exposure. Similar to regulation for other mycotoxins, the regulatory status of ochratoxin A (OTA) lacks consensus. Although this was one of the first fungal toxins to be subjected to compliance control due to its toxic properties, the conflict between the prime objective of consumer health safeguard and the economic interests of producers and traders remains. One of the key challenges facing policymakers is to balance these conflicting demands and reach consensual regulatory actions or limits. The noteworthy transboundary implications are recognized, both in the case of absence as the unsubstantiated tightening of regulatory limits. This paper scrutinizes the rationales and implications of mycotoxin regulation, with special attention devoted to OTA. In view of the ongoing debate concerning this complex issue, a review of the arguments and suggested strategies proposed by different parties is also made. The specific case of OTA regulation in food and feed is updated and analysed at a European Union and global level.


Veterinary Microbiology | 2011

Ochratoxin A in feed of food-producing animals: An undesirable mycotoxin with health and performance effects

S.C. Duarte; Celeste M. Lino; Angelina Pena

Mycotoxins are secondary fungal metabolites, whose presence in feed- and foodstuffs is unavoidable. Ochratoxin A (OTA) is one of the known mycotoxins with greatest public health and agro-economic significance. Several toxic effects have been ascribed following exposure, namely nephrotoxicity, as well negative impacts in the performance of farm animals, resulting in major economic implications. Of no less importance for the route of human exposure that can also embody the carry-over of OTA from feed into animal-derived products is also a concern. For all these reasons the present article updates the worldwide occurrence of OTA in different raw ingredients and finished feed destined to food-producing animals. After that a brief characterization of specie susceptibility and the major rationales is made. An historical overview of field outbreaks linked to OTA exposure in farm animals, concerning the implicated feeds, contamination levels and major clinical and productivity effects is presented. Finally a review of the major animal health and performance potential impacts of animals being reared on contaminated feed is made allied to a perspective regarding its co-occurrence with other mycotoxins, and simultaneous parasitic and bacterial infections. Ultimately, this article aims to be instructive and draw attention to a mycotoxin so often neglected and elapsed from the list of differential diagnosis in farm practice. For the unpredictability and unavoidability of occurrence, OTA will definitely be an enduring problem in animal production.


Veterinary Journal | 2012

Food safety implications of ochratoxin A in animal-derived food products.

S.C. Duarte; Celeste M. Lino; Angelina Pena

Ochratoxin A (OTA) is an important mycotoxin with potential to reach the human food chain through carry-over of contaminated, mostly cereal-based, feed into animal-derived products. Certain population groups, such as infants and children, are intensive and relatively restricted consumers of some animal-derived products, particularly milk and other dairy products, which may become contaminated with OTA. This review examines the literature on the occurrence of OTA in animal-derived products and discusses the public health and food safety implications of consumption of these products. The risk of OTA contamination of meat, milk, blood and derived products is discussed.


Science of The Total Environment | 2010

Monitoring of ochratoxin A exposure of the Portuguese population through a nationwide urine survey--Winter 2007.

S.C. Duarte; J.M.V. Bento; Angelina Pena; Celeste M. Lino; Cristina Delerue-Matos; Teresa Oliva-Teles; Simone Morais; Manuela Correia; M.B.P.P. Oliveira; M.R. Alves; J.A. Pereira

Ochratoxin A (OTA) is a mycotoxin produced by a variety of fungi, such as Penicillium verrucosum and Aspergillium spp., which has been found to have a wide number of potentially deadly toxic effects, and can enter the human organism through a variety of means. It then finds its way into the bloodstream and, after a lengthy process, is eventually excreted through the urine. It can thus be detected in its original form not only in blood samples but also in this biological medium. As such, and in an attempt to evaluate the exposure of the Portuguese population to this mycotoxin, morning urine samples were collected during the Winter of 2007, from each of five geographically distinct Portuguese locations--Bragança, Porto, Coimbra, Alentejo, and Algarve--and subjected to extraction by immunoaffinity columns and to OTA quantification through liquid chromatography coupled with fluorescence detection. Prevalent incidence was higher than 95% with Coimbra being the exception (incidence of 73.3%). In nearly all locations, the OTA content of most samples was found to be above the limit of quantification (LOQ) of 0.008 ng/ml. Indeed, excluding Coimbra, with an OTA content level of 0.014 ng/ml, all regions featured content values over 0.021 ng/ml.


Food Additives and Contaminants Part A-chemistry Analysis Control Exposure & Risk Assessment | 2009

Ochratoxin A exposure assessment of the inhabitants of Lisbon during winter 2007/2008 through bread and urine analysis

S.C. Duarte; J.M.V. Bento; Angelina Pena; Celeste M. Lino

A survey on the occurrence of ochratoxin A (OTA) in 41 bread samples was carried out in the Portuguese capital, Lisbon. Maize (5) and wheat bread (36) and 43 representative urine samples from the Lisbon region were assayed for OTA levels using immunoaffinity column cleanup (IAC) and HPLC with fluorimetric detection (LC–FD). The percentage of OTA-positive samples was slightly higher for maize bread (80%) than wheat bread (70.8%), although, due to its higher consumption, the latter contributes more to OTA exposure, featuring a higher estimated daily intake (EDI). In the urine samples analyzed, both female and male residents displayed similarly high levels of OTA frequency and average contamination. In summary, OTA is a food contaminant of concern and may constitute a hazard for public health through consumption of cereal-based products.


Toxins | 2010

Ochratoxin A in Portugal: A Review to Assess Human Exposure

S.C. Duarte; Angelina Pena; Celeste M. Lino

In Portugal, the climate, dietary habits, and food contamination levels present the characteristics for higher population susceptibility to ochratoxin A (OTA), one of the known mycotoxins with the greatest public health and agro-economic importance. In this review, following a brief historical insight on OTA research, a summary of the available data on OTA occurrence in food (cereals, bread, wine, meat) and biological fluids (blood, urine) is made. With this data, an estimation of intake is made to ascertain and update the risk exposure estimation of the Portuguese population, in comparison to previous studies and other populations.


International Journal of Hygiene and Environmental Health | 2012

Determinants of ochratoxin A exposure--a one year follow-up study of urine levels.

S.C. Duarte; M.R. Alves; Angelina Pena; Celeste M. Lino

Dietary exposure to the ochratoxin A (OTA) occurring in Portugal is characterized by a high frequency of contamination of the consumed foodstuffs, although at low levels. The exposure bears significance for the total food consumed, and not for a particular one. Biomonitoring studies are thus fundamental in simplifying the evaluation of exposure, with no need to examine the entire range of consumed foodstuffs. Biomonitoring studies further allow the identification of host factors as predictors of OTA exposure in epidemiologic studies, the results of which are merited for targeting intervention strategies by public health authorities and advising official regulatory decisions. Using a longitudinal approach, this study examined factors related to OTA exposure in the adult population over a one-year period. Anthropometric measures, season of the year and region were the selected factors correlated with OTA exposure biomarker. Urine samples from 95 inhabitants from six Portuguese main geographical areas were assayed through spectrofluorimetric detection. Exposure to OTA proved to markedly increase in winter, and gender differences were observed only in summer, which might be related to different dietary patterns not only between seasons, but also between genders. The same rationale may also serve the observed statistically significant differences between some regions. No other strong association upon the remaining determinants under testing was observed. These observations reinforce the need for OTA exposure evaluation, possibly specifically targeting the staple foods or dietary habits that sustain potential predictors or determinants of exposure.


Food Chemistry | 2013

Novel IAC-LC–ESI-MS2 analytical set-up for ochratoxin A determination in pork

S.C. Duarte; Celeste M. Lino; Angelina Pena

A reliable exposure assessment of mycotoxin contamination relies on their unambiguous identification and accurate quantification. With such purpose, a new analytical methodology was developed for evaluation of ochratoxin A (OTA) contamination in pork. Briefly OTA extraction from minced muscle samples involved the use of acidified methanol, ultrasound treatment and centrifugation, followed by an immunoaffinity column (IAC) clean-up step before mass spectrometric detection (precursor-to-fragment transitions: m/z 404→m/z 358 and m/z 404→m/z 386) in positive ESI mode using SRM scanning. The method combines green chemistry principles (e.g. absence of highly toxic solvents commonly used in this matrix) with a validation according to the guidelines laid down by the 2002/657/EC European Decision parameters: recoveries varied between 98.5% and 100.6%, limits of detection (LOD) and quantification (LOQ) were estimated at 0.06 and 0.19 μg/kg, whereas decision limit (CCα) and detection capability (CCβ) were 0.01 and 0.50 μg/kg, respectively. The proposed analytical set-up was successfully applied to twenty pork samples commercially acquired.

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Manuela Correia

Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto

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Simone Morais

Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto

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Teresa Oliva-Teles

Instituto Superior de Engenharia do Porto

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Cristina Delerue-Matos

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Hugo Vilhena

University of Trás-os-Montes and Alto Douro

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