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citrinin

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Description

Citrinin: Antibiotic and mycotoxin from Aspergillus niveus and Penicillium citrinum. [Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), National Library of Medicine, extracted Dec-2023]

Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID54680783
CHEBI ID48707
SCHEMBL ID157775
SCHEMBL ID24312832
MeSH IDM0004517

Synonyms (75)

Synonym
3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid, 4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-, (3r-trans)-
DIVK1C_000646
KBIO1_000646
NCI60_001544
SDCCGMLS-0066537.P001
hsdb 3473
nsc 186
brn 0088597
3,4-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6h-6-oxobenzo(c)pyran-7-carboxylic acid
einecs 208-257-2
4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid
ccris 175
SPECTRUM4_001804
SPECTRUM_000451
4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo, (3r-trans)-3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid
(3r,4s)-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-3,4-dihydroisochromene-7-carboxylic acid
IDI1_000646
SPECTRUM5_000507
wln: t66 co hv aut&j d1 e1 g1 ivq jq
citriain
nsc186 ,
citrinin
3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-, (3r-trans)-
nsc-186
518-75-2
citrinin, from penicillium citrinum, >=98% (hplc)
BSPBIO_001919
NCGC00160164-02
KBIOGR_002411
KBIO2_006067
KBIO3_001419
KBIOSS_000931
KBIO2_000931
KBIO2_003499
SPECTRUM2_000734
SPECTRUM3_000240
SPBIO_000688
NINDS_000646
SPECTRUM210186
NCGC00160164-03
NCGC00160164-01
(3r,4s)-4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid
(-)-citrinin
(3r-trans)-4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid
CHEBI:48707 ,
(3r,4s)-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-4,6-dihydro-3h-isochromene-7-carboxylic acid
HMS502A08
HMS1923C05
CCG-39048
3s697x6snz ,
unii-3s697x6snz
3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid, 4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-, (3r,4s)-
5-18-09-00061 (beilstein handbook reference)
citrinin [iarc]
citrinin [hsdb]
citrinin [mi]
SCHEMBL157775
CQIUKKVOEOPUDV-IYSWYEEDSA-N
3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid, 4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-
8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-4,6-dihydro-3h-isochromene-7-carboxylic acid #
mfcd00006912
DTXSID8020333
3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid, 4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-,(3r,4s)-
citrinin, 98%
AKOS030254668
sr-05000002496
SR-05000002496-1
(3r,4s)-6-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-8-oxo-3,4-dihydroisochromene-7-carboxylic acid
Q420354
Q63392265
citrinin 100 microg/ml in acetonitrile
3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid, 4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-, (3r-trans)-; citrinin (6ci); (3r,4s)-4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid; (-)-citrinin; 4,6-dihydro-8-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-6-oxo-
E80637
(3r,4s)-6-hydroxy-3,4,5-trimethyl-8-oxo-4,8-dihydro-3h-2-benzopyran-7-carboxylic acid
SCHEMBL24312832

Research Excerpts

Overview

Citrinin (CIT) is a polyketide-derived mycotoxin, which is produced by many fungal strains belonging to the gerena Monascus, Aspergillus, and Penicillium. It is widely found in vegetable-derived foods such as cereals and fermented rice-based food supplements. Citrinin has been searched as an anticancer drug candidate.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Citrinin (CTN) is a polyketide mycotoxin produced by several strains of Penicillium, Monascus, and Aspergillus. "( Citrinin impairs pig oocyte maturation by inducing oxidative stress and apoptosis.
Jiang, H; Jiang, WJ; Kim, NH; Li, YH; Liu, W; Xu, YN, 2022
)
3.61
"Citrinin (CIT) is a mycotoxin produced by different species of "( Citrinin Mycotoxin Contamination in Food and Feed: Impact on Agriculture, Human Health, and Detection and Management Strategies.
Arora, S; Barua, S; Dhakane-Lad, J; Gamlath, S; Gupta, A; Kamle, M; Kumar, A; Kumar, M; Kumar, P; Mahato, DK; Mishra, S; Pandhi, S; Saurabh, V; Selvakumar, R; Sharma, B; Sharma, N, 2022
)
3.61
"Citrinin (CIT) is a mycotoxin produced as a secondary product by the genera "( Mechanisms underlying citrinin-induced toxicity via oxidative stress and apoptosis-mediated by mitochondrial-dependent pathway in SH-SY5Y cells.
Abudayyak, M; Karaman, EF; Ozden, S, 2023
)
2.67
"Citrinin (CTN) is a mycotoxin that is found as a contaminant in various types of food/feed grains and fermented food supplements. "( Neurotoxicity of mycotoxin citrinin: Novel evidence in developing zebrafish and underlying mechanisms in human neuron cells.
Liu, BH; Tsai, JF; Wu, TS; Yu, FY, 2023
)
2.65
"Citrinin (CIT) is a polyketide-derived mycotoxin, which is produced by many fungal strains belonging to the gerena Monascus, Aspergillus, and Penicillium. "( Citrinin as a potential anti-cancer therapy: A comprehensive review.
Aguiar, RPS; Braga, AL; Calina, D; da Silva, FCC; de Menezes, APM; Dey, A; Hasan, MM; Islam, MT; Melo-Cavalcante, AAC; Santos, JVO; Sarkar, C; Sharifi-Rad, J; Sousa, JMC, 2023
)
3.8
"Citrinin (CTN) is a secondary fungal metabolite produced by several species of Aspergillins and Penicillins, and it is widely found in vegetable-derived foods such as cereals and fermented rice-based food supplements. "( Citrinin exposure disrupts organelle distribution and functions in mouse oocytes.
Li, XH; Pan, ZN; Sun, MH; Sun, SC; Xu, Y, 2020
)
3.44
"Citrinin (CIT) is a cytotoxic, hepatotoxic, nephrotoxic and cardiotoxic metabolite obtained from Penicillium citrinum, that has been increasingly searched as an anticancer drug candidate. "( Antitumor effects of citrinin in an animal model of Sarcoma 180 via cytogenetic mechanisms.
Afzal, MI; De Alencar, MVOB; De Castro E Sousa, JM; De Lima, RMT; De Menezes, APM; Dias, ACS; Dos Reis, AC; Dos Santos Andrade, TJA; Ferreira, JRO; Ferreira, PMP; Filho, JWGO; Hameed, A; Imran, M; Islam, MT; Martins, N; Melo Cavalcante, AAC; Qamar, M; Salehi, B; Santos, JVO; Sharifi-Rad, J; Silva, DHS; Umer, M, 2020
)
2.32
"Citrinin is a toxic small organic molecule produced as a secondary metabolite by fungi types Penicillium, Monascus and Aspergillus and is known to contaminate various food commodities during postharvest stages of food production. "( Recent advances in analytical methods for the determination of citrinin in food matrices.
Atapattu, SN; Poole, CF, 2020
)
2.24
"Citrinin (CIT) is a polyketide mycotoxin occurring in a variety of food and feedstuff, among which cereal grains are the most important contaminated source. "( A Study of Carry-Over and Histopathological Effects after Chronic Dietary Intake of Citrinin in Pigs, Broiler Chickens and Laying Hens.
Couck, L; Croubels, S; De Bels, L; De Rycke, R; De Saeger, S; Devreese, M; Huybrechts, B; Meerpoel, C; Tangni, EK; Van den Broeck, W; Vidal, A, 2020
)
2.23
"Citrinin (CIT) is a mycotoxin produced by fungi and is found in association with patulin, and ochratoxin A, which is nephrotoxic, hepatotoxic, immunosuppression, and carcinogenic."( A review on citrinin: Its occurrence, risk implications, analytical techniques, biosynthesis, physiochemical properties and control.
Ahima, J; Yang, Q; Zhang, H; Zhang, X; Zhao, L; Zheng, X, 2021
)
1.72
"Citrinin (CTN) is a mycotoxin, which is isolated from Penicillium citrinum and widely existed in the contaminated feeds. "( Exposure to citrinin induces DNA damage, autophagy, and mitochondria dysfunction during first cleavage of mouse embryos.
Cai, WW; Huang, YL; Ju, JQ; Pan, WL; Sun, SC, 2021
)
2.44
"Citrinin is a mycotoxin produced by several species of the genera "( PRESENCE OF CITRININ IN GRAINS AND ITS POSSIBLE HEALTH EFFECTS.
Bevardi, M; Bošnir, J; Čulig, B; Galić, A; Kuharić, Ž; Lasić, D; Racz, A; Serdar, S, 2017
)
2.28
"Citrinin (CIT) is a mycotoxin which causes contamination in the food and is associated with different toxic effects. "( A comprehensive review on biological properties of citrinin.
Ali, ES; Atanasov, AG; Dantas, SMMM; Das, N; de Alencar, MVOB; de Brito, MDRM; de Medeiros, MDGF; de Oliveira Filho, JWG; Dos Santos Andrade, TJA; E Sousa, JMC; Ferreira, PMP; Gupta, VK; Islam, MT; Júnior, ALG; Kamal, MA; Melo-Cavalcante, AAC; Mishra, SK; Mocan, A; Paz, MFCJ; Pieczynska, MD; Rolim, HML; Santos, JVO; Shaw, S; Singh, BN; Uddin, SJ, 2017
)
2.15
"Citrinin (CIT) is a hepato-nephrotoxic fungal metabolite produced by the genera Penicillium, Aspergillus and Monascu. "( Novel monoclonal antibody-based immunochromatographic strip for detecting citrinin in fruit from Zhejiang province, China.
Cai, Z; Chen, X; Chen, Y; Cheng, H; Du, A; Yang, Y, 2018
)
2.15
"Citrinin (CIT) is a nephrotoxic mycotoxin produced by "( Interaction of Dihydrocitrinone with Native and Chemically Modified Cyclodextrins.
Bergmann, D; Faisal, Z; Humpf, HU; Kunsági-Máté, S; Lemli, B; Poór, M; Szente, L, 2019
)
1.96
"Citrinin (CTN) is a toxic fungal metabolite that is a hazardous contaminant of foods and feeds. "( Citrinin-induced fluidization of the plasma membrane of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe.
Blaskó, Á; Czibulya, Z; Gazdag, Z; Gróf, P; Kunsági-Máté, S; Mike, N; Nagy, L; Pesti, M, 2013
)
3.28
"Citrinin (CTN) is a food-contaminating mycotoxin that efficiently induces renal tumors in rats. "( Cell cycle progression, but not genotoxic activity, mainly contributes to citrinin-induced renal carcinogenesis.
Ishii, Y; Kijima, A; Kuroda, K; Matsushita, K; Nohmi, T; Ogawa, K; Sakai, H; Sugita-Konishi, Y; Takahashi, H; Takasu, S; Umemura, T; Watanabe, M; Yanai, T, 2013
)
2.06
"Citrinin (CTN) is a fungal secondary metabolite that contaminates various foodstuffs and animal feeds; it also exhibits organotoxicity in several animal models. "( Cardiotoxicity of mycotoxin citrinin and involvement of microRNA-138 in zebrafish embryos.
Liu, BH; Wu, TS; Yang, JJ; Yu, FY, 2013
)
2.13
"Citrinin is a toxic secondary metabolite first isolated from Penicillium citrinum, although is also produced by other species of Penicillium and Aspergillus. "( Multi-commutated fluorometric optosensor for the determination of citrinin in rice and red yeast rice supplements.
Jiménez-López, J; Llorent-Martínez, EJ; Ortega-Barrales, P; Ruiz-Medina, A, 2014
)
2.08
"Citrinin (CIT) is a mycotoxin contaminant in food commodities and can co-occur with ochratoxin A (OTA), another nephrotoxic contaminant in food and feed. "( First results on citrinin biomarkers in urines from rural and urban cohorts in Bangladesh.
Ali, N; Alim, A; Blaszkewicz, M; Degen, GH; Hossain, K; Mohanto, NC; Rahman, M, 2015
)
2.2
"Citrinin (CIT) is a mycotoxin produced by several Aspergillus, Penicillium, and Monascus species. "( Interaction of Citrinin with Human Serum Albumin.
Bálint, M; Hetényi, C; Kőszegi, T; Kunsági-Máté, S; Lemli, B; Poór, M; Sali, N, 2015
)
2.21
"Citrinin (3) is a polyketide-derived mycotoxin, that is, produced by Monascus, Penicillium, and Aspergillus spp. "( Delineating citrinin biosynthesis: Ctn-ORF3 dioxygenase-mediated multi-step methyl oxidation precedes a reduction-mediated pyran ring cyclization.
Balakrishnan, B; Chandran, R; Kwon, HJ; Park, SH, 2016
)
2.26
"Citrinin is a nephrotoxic mycotoxin which can be synthesized by Monascus mold during the fermentation process in foods. "( Citrinin mycotoxin recognition and removal by naked magnetic nanoparticles.
Aragao, GMF; Baratella, D; Bonaiuto, E; Čépe, K; Jakubec, P; Magro, M; Malina, O; Moritz, DE; Terzo, M; Vianello, F; Zboril, R, 2016
)
3.32
"Citrinin is a toxic secondary metabolite of "( Comparative Transcriptome Analysis of Penicillium citrinum Cultured with Different Carbon Sources Identifies Genes Involved in Citrinin Biosynthesis.
Duan, X; Gong, L; Hu, W; Jian, Q; Jiang, G; Jiang, Y; Li, T; Qu, H; Wang, J; Wang, Y; Wu, Y; Xiong, Y; Zhu, X, 2017
)
2.1
"Citrinin (CTN) is a nephrotoxic mycotoxin produced by several fungal strains belonging to the genera Penicillium, Aspergillus, and Monascus. "( Toxicological properties of citrinin.
Flajs, D; Peraica, M, 2009
)
2.09
"Citrinin is a toxic fermentation by-product which can be found as a contaminant."( Simultaneous determination of lovastatin and citrinin in red yeast rice supplements by micellar electrokinetic capillary chromatography.
Mornar, A; Nigović, B; Sertić, M, 2013
)
1.37
"Citrinin is a nephrotoxic fungal metabolite that has been demonstrated to be mutagenic in hepatocytes. "( Citrinin production and stability in cheese.
Bailly, JD; Benard, G; Guerre, P; Le Bars-Bailly, S; Querin, A, 2002
)
3.2
"Citrinin is a mycotoxin which can induce renal dysfunction, and it is tumorigenic. "( [A brief introduction of citrinin and study progress of its immunoassay methods].
Liu, R; Xu, Y, 2004
)
2.07
"Citrinin is a mycotoxin, which is produced by fungi belonging to the genus Monascus, known in biotechnology as producers of azaphilone pigments. "( Pigments and citrinin biosynthesis by fungi belonging to genus Monascus.
Kujumdzieva, A; Pisareva, E; Savov, V,
)
1.94
"Citrinin is a product of fungal metabolism capable of producing nephrotoxicity. "( Disposition and metabolism of [14C]citrinin in pregnant rats.
Berndt, WO; Hayes, AW; Reddy, RV, 1982
)
1.98
"Citrinin is a toxic metabolite produced by several species of Penicillium and Aspergillus. "( High-performance liquid chromatographic analysis of the mycotoxin citrinin and its application to biological fluids.
Berndt, WO; Hayes, AW; Phillips, RD, 1980
)
1.94
"Citrinin is a nephrotoxic mycotoxin produced by common molds. "( Avian diuretic response to renal portal infusions of the mycotoxin citrinin.
Glahn, RP; Wideman, RF, 1987
)
1.95
"Citrinin is a known nephrotoxicant but produced a low order of cytotoxicity in cultured renal cells."( Cytotoxicity of citrinin in cultured kidney epithelial cell systems.
Kleinschuster, SJ; Sharma, RP; Yoneyama, M, 1986
)
1.34

Effects

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Citrinin has an inhibitory effect on growth of T. "( Antiprotozoal activity in citrinin.
Birkhead, HE; Hall, EA; Hayes, AW, 1976
)
2

Actions

Citrinin can cause serious human diseases, thus its detection in foods is necessary. Citrinin promotes reduction of the amplitude of swelling in the presence of Na+ ions.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Citrinin can cause serious human diseases, thus its detection in foods is necessary. "( A novel ratiometric electrochemical sensor for the selective detection of citrinin based on molecularly imprinted poly(thionine) on ionic liquid decorated boron and nitrogen co-doped hierarchical porous carbon.
Hu, X; Liu, Y; Xia, Y; Zeng, B; Zhao, F, 2021
)
2.29
"Citrinin promotes reduction of the amplitude of swelling in the presence of Na+ ions."( Mechanism of citrinin-induced dysfunction of mitochondria. III. Effects on renal cortical and liver mitochondrial swelling.
Campello, AP; Chagas, GM; Klüppel, ML; Oliveira, MB,
)
1.22

Treatment

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Citrinin-treated birds were injected with a 6 mg/mL solution of citrinin at a dose of 6 mg/kg BW."( Effects of chronic ochratoxin A and citrinin toxicosis on kidney function of single comb White Leghorn pullets.
Glahn, RP; Huff, WE; Shapiro, RS; Vena, VE; Wideman, RF, 1989
)
1.27

Toxicity

Citrinin was less toxic than ochratoxin A in all of the cell lines examined. The genotoxicity was less severe than the patulin, suggesting that citrinin isLess toxic than patulin.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" Citrinin was less toxic than ochratoxin A in all of the cell lines examined."( Toxicity evaluation of the mycotoxins, citrinin and ochratoxin A, using several animal cell lines.
Doi, E; Kitabatake, N; Trivedi, AB, 1993
)
1.47
" Results from the HA assay indicated that the minimal affective concentrations of citrinin required to elicit a toxic response in the adult hydra (MACA) and in the regenerating hydra (MACD) were 30 mg/l and 20 mg/l, respectively."( Evaluation of the developmental toxicity of citrinin using Hydra attenuata and postimplantation rat whole embryo culture.
Edwards, JF; Mayura, K; Phillips, TD; Spainhour, CB; Yang, YG, 1993
)
0.77
" Altered dosing strategy, but not seeding density, consistently influenced cytotoxicity: CIT was more toxic to cells when added at the time of seeding, whereas OA was more toxic when added 24 h after cultures were seeded."( Cytotoxicity of nephrotoxic fungal toxins to kidney-derived LLC-PK1 and OK cell lines.
Armstrong, CL; Bondy, GS, 1998
)
0.3
" Thereby the yeast vacuolar ATPase was found to be important for the toxic effect of citrinin in yeast cells."( A screen of yeast respiratory mutants for sensitivity against the mycotoxin citrinin identifies the vacuolar ATPase as an essential factor for the toxicity mechanism.
Ammar, H; Lisowsky, T; Michaelis, G, 2000
)
0.76
" Therefore, the question is justified whether such a combined intake of mycotoxins would lead to a possible higher risk for adverse health effects than the intake of one of these mycotoxins alone."( Combined toxic effects of mycotoxins.
Speijers, GJ; Speijers, MH, 2004
)
0.32
" It may be concluded that on simultaneous exposure, CIT potentiated the toxic effects of OTA on renal ultrastructure."( Ochratoxin A and citrinin nephrotoxicity in New Zealand White rabbits: an ultrastructural assessment.
Dwivedi, P; Kumar, M; Patil, RD; Sharma, AK; Singh, ND, 2007
)
0.68
" The genotoxicity was less severe than the patulin, suggesting that citrinin is less toxic than patulin."( Evaluation of toxicity of the mycotoxin citrinin using yeast ORF DNA microarray and Oligo DNA microarray.
Hosoda, H; Ishizawa, YH; Iwahashi, H; Iwahashi, Y; Kitagawa, E; Kuboki, Y; Nobumasa, H; Suzuki, Y; Ueda, Y, 2007
)
0.84
"Dietary exposures to environmental food pollutants such as mycotoxin(s) or pesticide(s) have gained immense significance due to their adverse effects on production and reproduction in animal and human populations."( Citrinin and endosulfan induced maternal toxicity in pregnant Wistar rats: pathomorphological study.
Dwivedi, P; Kumar, M; Patil, RD; Sharma, AK; Singh, ND,
)
1.57
" purpureus did not cause any toxic effects in albino rats."( Safety evaluation of Monascus purpureus red mould rice in albino rats.
Kumari, HP; Naidu, KA; Narasimhamurthy, K; Vijayalakshmi, G; Vishwanatha, S, 2009
)
0.35
" Various citrinin concentrations (1, 2, 10, 20, and 200 ppm) in the red mold rice are, respectively, estimated for safe use in animal tests."( A 90-d toxicity study of monascus-fermented products including high citrinin level.
Lee, CH; Lee, CL; Pan, TM, 2010
)
1.01
" The results suggest that CTN has adverse effects on the reproductive system of adult male mice."( Toxic effects of citrinin on the male reproductive system in mice.
Linbo, Y; Qingqing, H; Shuqiang, L; Yunqian, G, 2012
)
0.72
" are toxic and hold a significant genotoxic efficacy at nanomolar concentrations."( Mycotoxins' activity at toxic and sub-toxic concentrations: differential cytotoxic and genotoxic effects of single and combined administration of sterigmatocystin, ochratoxin A and citrinin on the hepatocellular cancer cell line Hep3B.
Anninou, N; Chatzaki, E; Papachristou, F; Pitiakoudis, M; Simopoulos, C, 2014
)
0.59
"Mycotoxins, ochratoxin A (OTA), and citrinin (CTN) are toxic metabolites of filamentous fungi."( Safety evaluation of Ochratoxin A and Citrinin after 28 days repeated dose oral exposure to Wistar rats.
Ansari, KM; Arshad, M; Ayanur, A; Dev, I; Jagdale, PR; Singh, D, 2020
)
1.1

Bioavailability

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" The results suggest that CIT has adverse effects on fetal development which may be due to the longer bioavailability of citrinin in the animals."( Effect of feeding graded doses of Citrinin on clinical and teratology in female Wistar rats.
Kumar, M; Leishangthem, GD; Patil, RD; Rahman, S; Sharma, AK; Singh, ND, 2014
)
0.89

Dosage Studied

The extent and type of renal ultrastructural changes in Beagle dogs varied with the administration of ochratoxin A and citrinin alone and in the two dosage combinations.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
"The extent and type of renal ultrastructural changes in Beagle dogs varied with the administration of ochratoxin A and citrinin alone and in the two dosage combinations."( Ochratoxin A and citrinin induced nephrosis in Beagle dogs. III. Terminal renal ultrastructural alterations.
Carlton, WW; Hinsman, EJ; Kitchen, DN, 1977
)
0.81
" The present study was conducted to evaluate the dose-response effects of citrinin and to further evaluate previously reported phosphaturic effects of citrinin."( Avian diuretic response to renal portal infusions of the mycotoxin citrinin.
Glahn, RP; Wideman, RF, 1987
)
0.74
" While cytotoxicity assays have proven useful for establishing relative toxicity and structure function relationships within groups of fungal toxins, a drawback of in vitro bioassays is their susceptibility to variation depending on endpoint, target cell, and dosing strategy."( Cytotoxicity of nephrotoxic fungal toxins to kidney-derived LLC-PK1 and OK cell lines.
Armstrong, CL; Bondy, GS, 1998
)
0.3
" Dose-response curves for each mycotoxin and mycotoxin combinations were generated."( Combined effects of selected Penicillium mycotoxins on in vitro proliferation of porcine lymphocytes.
Bernhoft, A; Flåøyen, A; Keblys, M; Larsen, HJ; Morrison, E, 2004
)
0.32
" An accurate, simple and rapid micellar electrokinetic capillary chromatographic method was developed for the first time for simultaneous determination of lovastatin present in lactone and hydroxy acid forms and citrinin in red rice products provided by different manufacturers and formulated in various dosage forms."( Simultaneous determination of lovastatin and citrinin in red yeast rice supplements by micellar electrokinetic capillary chromatography.
Mornar, A; Nigović, B; Sertić, M, 2013
)
0.84
"This study applied multi-mycotoxin liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometric detection (LC-MS/MS) methods to determine the biomarkers of exposure in urine and serum samples from a dose-response study with pigs."( Biomarkers of Deoxynivalenol, Citrinin, Ochratoxin A and Zearalenone in Pigs after Exposure to Naturally Contaminated Feed Close to Guidance Values.
Dąbrowski, M; Jedziniak, P; Ochodzki, P; Rudawska, A; Tkaczyk, A; Zielonka, Ł, 2021
)
0.91
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Protein Targets (6)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Chain A, Putative fructose-1,6-bisphosphate aldolaseGiardia intestinalisPotency12.55940.140911.194039.8107AID2451
Microtubule-associated protein tauHomo sapiens (human)Potency31.62280.180013.557439.8107AID1460
vitamin D3 receptor isoform VDRAHomo sapiens (human)Potency89.12510.354828.065989.1251AID504847
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Inhibition Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Solute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)Ki3,080.00000.03003.20437.8200AID598878; AID678821
Solute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)Ki15.40000.04004.22979.0000AID678814
Solute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)Ki366.40000.20002.57716.1500AID678972
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (15)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
monoatomic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
response to organic cyclic compoundSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
inorganic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
alpha-ketoglutarate transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
sodium-independent organic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
metanephric proximal tubule developmentSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
renal tubular secretionSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
monoatomic ion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
response to toxic substanceSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
inorganic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transportSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
transport across blood-brain barrierSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
monoatomic ion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
inorganic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transportSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transportSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
urate metabolic processSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
transmembrane transportSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (11)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
solute:inorganic anion antiporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
alpha-ketoglutarate transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
antiporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
chloride ion bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
sodium-independent organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
solute:inorganic anion antiporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
solute:inorganic anion antiporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
prostaglandin transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
sodium-independent organic anion transmembrane transporter activitySolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (8)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
caveolaSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
basal plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
basolateral plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complexSolute carrier family 22 member 6Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
basolateral plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeSolute carrier family 22 member 8Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
basal plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeSolute carrier family 22 member 11Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (25)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID588519A screen for compounds that inhibit viral RNA polymerase binding and polymerization activities2011Antiviral research, Sep, Volume: 91, Issue:3
High-throughput screening identification of poliovirus RNA-dependent RNA polymerase inhibitors.
AID540299A screen for compounds that inhibit the MenB enzyme of Mycobacterium tuberculosis2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Nov-01, Volume: 20, Issue:21
Synthesis and SAR studies of 1,4-benzoxazine MenB inhibitors: novel antibacterial agents against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
AID697853Inhibition of horse BChE at 2 mg/ml by Ellman's method2012Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Nov-15, Volume: 20, Issue:22
Exploration of natural compounds as sources of new bifunctional scaffolds targeting cholinesterases and beta amyloid aggregation: the case of chelerythrine.
AID678821TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Ochratoxin A uptake in OAT1-expressing S2 cells2001Life sciences, Sep-21, Volume: 69, Issue:18
Characterization of ochratoxin A transport by human organic anion transporters.
AID1594144Inhibition of Escherichia coli GroEL expressed in Escherichia coliDH5alpha/Escherichia coli GroES expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) assessed as reduction in GroEL/GroES-mediated denatured soluble pig heart MDH refolding by measuring MDH enzyme acti2019Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 05-01, Volume: 29, Issue:9
HSP60/10 chaperonin systems are inhibited by a variety of approved drugs, natural products, and known bioactive molecules.
AID977602Inhibition of sodium fluorescein uptake in OATP1B3-transfected CHO cells at an equimolar substrate-inhibitor concentration of 10 uM2013Molecular pharmacology, Jun, Volume: 83, Issue:6
Structure-based identification of OATP1B1/3 inhibitors.
AID681801TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Ochratoxin A uptake (OTA: 1 uM, Citrinin: 200 uM) in Xenopus laevis oocytes1999The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Jun, Volume: 289, Issue:3
Transport of ochratoxin A by renal multispecific organic anion transporter 1.
AID678972TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Ochratoxin A uptake in OAT4-expressing S2 cells2002Biochimica et biophysica acta, Jun-12, Volume: 1590, Issue:1-3
Role of human organic anion transporter 4 in the transport of ochratoxin A.
AID616589Cytotoxicity against human HCT116 cells after 72 hrs by SRB assay2011Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-25, Volume: 54, Issue:16
Unprecedented citrinin trimer tricitinol B functions as a novel topoisomerase IIα inhibitor.
AID697852Inhibition of electric eel AChE at 2 mg/ml by Ellman's method2012Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Nov-15, Volume: 20, Issue:22
Exploration of natural compounds as sources of new bifunctional scaffolds targeting cholinesterases and beta amyloid aggregation: the case of chelerythrine.
AID1594145Inhibition of Escherichia coli GroEL expressed in Escherichia coli DH5alpha/Escherichia coli GroES expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) assessed as reduction in GroEL/GroES-mediated denatured rhodanese refolding by measuring rhodanese enzyme activity 2019Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 05-01, Volume: 29, Issue:9
HSP60/10 chaperonin systems are inhibited by a variety of approved drugs, natural products, and known bioactive molecules.
AID380389Binding affinity to spinach calmodulin at 0.033 ug/mL after 1.5 hrs by electrophoretic mobility assay presence of EGTA2000Journal of natural products, Jun, Volume: 63, Issue:6
Phytotoxic compounds from the new coprophilous fungus guanomyces polythrix.
AID977599Inhibition of sodium fluorescein uptake in OATP1B1-transfected CHO cells at an equimolar substrate-inhibitor concentration of 10 uM2013Molecular pharmacology, Jun, Volume: 83, Issue:6
Structure-based identification of OATP1B1/3 inhibitors.
AID380386Binding affinity to bovine brain calmodulin at 0.033 ug/mL after 1.5 hrs by electrophoretic mobility assay in presence of calcium chloride2000Journal of natural products, Jun, Volume: 63, Issue:6
Phytotoxic compounds from the new coprophilous fungus guanomyces polythrix.
AID598878Inhibition of Oat12011Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Jun-01, Volume: 19, Issue:11
Elucidation of common pharmacophores from analysis of targeted metabolites transported by the multispecific drug transporter-Organic anion transporter1 (Oat1).
AID380385Phytotoxicity against Echinochloa crusgalli assessed as inhibition of radicle elongation2000Journal of natural products, Jun, Volume: 63, Issue:6
Phytotoxic compounds from the new coprophilous fungus guanomyces polythrix.
AID380384Phytotoxicity against Amaranthus hypochondriacus assessed as inhibition of radicle elongation2000Journal of natural products, Jun, Volume: 63, Issue:6
Phytotoxic compounds from the new coprophilous fungus guanomyces polythrix.
AID380388Binding affinity to spinach calmodulin at 0.033 ug/mL after 1.5 hrs by electrophoretic mobility assay in presence of calcium chloride2000Journal of natural products, Jun, Volume: 63, Issue:6
Phytotoxic compounds from the new coprophilous fungus guanomyces polythrix.
AID616588Cytotoxicity against human HL60 cells after 72 hrs by MTT assay2011Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-25, Volume: 54, Issue:16
Unprecedented citrinin trimer tricitinol B functions as a novel topoisomerase IIα inhibitor.
AID385146Antioxidant activity assessed as DPPH free radical scavenging activity after 30 mins2008Journal of natural products, Apr, Volume: 71, Issue:4
Citrinin dimers from the halotolerant fungus Penicillium citrinum B-57.
AID678814TP_TRANSPORTER: inhibition of Ochratoxin A uptake in OAT3-expressing S2 cells2001Life sciences, Sep-21, Volume: 69, Issue:18
Characterization of ochratoxin A transport by human organic anion transporters.
AID616587Cytotoxicity against human KB cells after 72 hrs by SRB assay2011Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-25, Volume: 54, Issue:16
Unprecedented citrinin trimer tricitinol B functions as a novel topoisomerase IIα inhibitor.
AID380387Binding affinity to bovine brain calmodulin at 0.033 ug/mL after 1.5 hrs by electrophoretic mobility assay in presence of EGTA2000Journal of natural products, Jun, Volume: 63, Issue:6
Phytotoxic compounds from the new coprophilous fungus guanomyces polythrix.
AID1508630Primary qHTS for small molecule stabilizers of the endoplasmic reticulum resident proteome: Secreted ER Calcium Modulated Protein (SERCaMP) assay2021Cell reports, 04-27, Volume: 35, Issue:4
A target-agnostic screen identifies approved drugs to stabilize the endoplasmic reticulum-resident proteome.
AID1159607Screen for inhibitors of RMI FANCM (MM2) intereaction2016Journal of biomolecular screening, Jul, Volume: 21, Issue:6
A High-Throughput Screening Strategy to Identify Protein-Protein Interaction Inhibitors That Block the Fanconi Anemia DNA Repair Pathway.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (584)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-1990137 (23.46)18.7374
1990's55 (9.42)18.2507
2000's104 (17.81)29.6817
2010's193 (33.05)24.3611
2020's95 (16.27)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 53.92

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be very strong demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index53.92 (24.57)
Research Supply Index6.44 (2.92)
Research Growth Index4.84 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index89.19 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.00 (0.95)

This Compound (53.92)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials1 (0.16%)5.53%
Reviews35 (5.62%)6.00%
Case Studies1 (0.16%)4.05%
Observational0 (0.00%)0.25%
Other586 (94.06%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]