verruculogen and verrucosidin

verruculogen has been researched along with verrucosidin* in 2 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for verruculogen and verrucosidin

ArticleYear
Tremorgenic mycotoxins.
    Fortschritte der Chemie organischer Naturstoffe = Progress in the chemistry of organic natural products. Progres dans la chimie des substances organiques naturelles, 1985, Volume: 48

    Topics: Fungi; Indole Alkaloids; Indoles; Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy; Mass Spectrometry; Molecular Conformation; Mycotoxins; Pyrans; Pyrazines; Pyrones; Tremor

1985

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for verruculogen and verrucosidin

ArticleYear
Genotoxicity assessment of five tremorgenic mycotoxins (fumitremorgen B, paxilline, penitrem A, verruculogen, and verrucosidin) produced by molds isolated from fermented meats.
    Journal of food protection, 2003, Volume: 66, Issue:11

    A number of toxinogenic fungal species, particularly producers of tremorgenic mycotoxins, have been isolated from traditional fermented meats. Tremorgenic mycotoxins are a group of fungal metabolites known to act on the central nervous system, causing sustained tremors, convulsions, and death in animals. However, the mode of action of these mycotoxins has not been elucidated in detail, and their genotoxic capacity has hardly been investigated. Because genotoxicity is one of the most prominent toxicological end points in food safety testing, we assessed the genotoxicity of five tremorgenic mycotoxins (fumitremorgen B, paxilline, penitrem A, verrucosidin, and verruculogen) associated with molds found in fermented meats. The mycotoxins were tested in two short-term in vitro assays with the use of different genotoxic end points in different phylogenetic systems (the Ames Salmonella/mammalian-microsome assay and the single-cell gel electrophoresis assay of human lymphocytes). According to the results obtained in this study, all of the investigated mycotoxins except penitrem A exhibited a certain degree of genotoxicity. Verrucosidin appeared to have the highest toxic potential, testing positive in both assays. Verruculogen tested positive in the Salmonella/mammalian-microsome assay, and paxilline and fumitremorgen B caused DNA damage in human lymphocytes. The use of fungal starter cultures to avoid tremorgen contamination in fermented meats is recommended.

    Topics: DNA Damage; Fermentation; Food Contamination; Food Microbiology; Indoles; Lymphocytes; Meat Products; Mutagenicity Tests; Mutation; Mycotoxins; Pyrones

2003