Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6392400 Food Control 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•All cubilose in this surveillance had different levels of nitrite contamination.•The medians of nitrite content of cubiloses were as follows: Red > Yellow > White.•No nitrite was detected from cubilose after the standard processing.•A nitrate reductase was identified which converted nitrate to nitrite in cubilose.•Sodium tungstate abolished the nitrite formation in cubilose.

The discovery of nitrite contamination aroused public concern on the safety of cubilose consumption. Here, forty-eight batches of cubilose were randomly purchased from Hong Kong market. The median nitrite content of different types of cubilose was as follows: Red cubilose (600 ppm) > Yellow cubilose (510 ppm) ;> White cubilose (100 ppm). Under a developed standardized processing method, up to 98% of nitrite was removed from cubilose; nitrite was not detected in the stewed cubilose. To search for the source of nitrite, droppings from swiftlets and water samples were collected from production sites of cubilose in Malaysia and Indonesia, and which contained a high amount of nitrate. On the other hand, the protein extract of cubilose was subjected to proteomics analysis. A microbial nitrate reductase was identified by mass spectroscopy, which converted nitrate to nitrite in cubilose. A specific inhibitor of nitrate reductase successfully abolished the nitrate reduction activity found in cubilose, which subsequently reduced the nitrite in cubilose. This phenomenon was successfully proven by the field study. Thus, the nitrite on cubilose could be a result of the contaminating nitrate reductase.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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