Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4366380 | International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2016 | 8 Pages |
•Heat-stable toxins and their producer bacteria were found in cereal grains.•Antimycin A and streptomycetes producing it were found in barley.•Antimycin A is more mitochondriotoxic than the mycotoxin enniatin B.•Toxin-producing streptomycetes may pose a novel safety hazard for food and feed.
Reasons for mammalian cell toxicity observed in barley and spring wheat grains were sought. Streptomyces sp. isolates from wheat and barley produced heat-stable methanol-soluble substances which inhibited the motility of exposed porcine spermatozoa used as a toxicity indicator. Several barley isolates produced antimycin A (2 to 5 ng/mg wet wt of biomass), a macrolide antibiotic known to block oxygen utilization in mitochondria. The antimycin-producing isolates were members of the Streptomyces albidoflavus group. In in vitro assays with porcine kidney tubular epithelial cells, the specific toxicity of antimycin A towards mitochondria was higher than that of the mycotoxin enniatin B but lower than that of the mitochondriotoxins cereulide and paenilide, produced by food-related Bacillus cereus and Paenibacillus tundrae, respectively. The toxic wheat isolates, related to Streptomyces sedi, did not produce antimycin A and or any other known toxin. Our results suggest that the presence of toxin-producing streptomycetes in stored cereal grains may pose a thus far unrecognized threat for food and feed safety.