Bacterial species and mycotoxin contamination associated with locust bean, melon and their fermented products in south-western Nigeria
Date
2017Author
Adedeji, Bamidele S.
Ezeokoli, Obinna T.
Adeleke, Rasheed A.
Ezekiel, Chibundu N.
Obadina, Adewale O.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The microbiological safety of spontaneously fermented foods is not always guaranteed due to the unde
fi
ned
fermenting microbial consortium and processing materials. In this study, two commonly consumed traditional
condiments (
iru
and
ogiri
) and their respective raw seeds (locust bean and melon) purchased from markets in
south-western Nigeria were assessed for bacterial diversity and mycotoxin contamination using 16S rRNA gene
sequencing and liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), respectively. Two hundred
isolates obtained from the raw seeds and condiments clustered into 10 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) and
spanned 3 phyla, 10 genera, 14 species and 2 sub-species.
Bacillus
(25%) and
Staphylococcus
(23.5%) dominated
other genera. Potentially pathogenic species such as
Alcaligenes faecalis
,
Bacillus anthracis
,
Proteus mirabilis
and
Staphylococcus sciuri
subsp.
sciuri
occurred in the samples, suggesting poor hygienic practice during production
and/or handling of the condiments. A total of 48 microbial metabolites including 7 mycotoxins [3-nitropropionic
acid, a
fl
atoxin B
1
(AFB
1
), AFB
2
, beauvericin, citrinin, ochratoxin A and sterigmatocystin] were quanti
fi
ed in the
food samples. Melon and
ogiri
had detectable a
fl
atoxin levels whereas locust bean and
iru
did not; the overall
mycotoxin levels in the food samples were low. There is a need to educate processors/vendors of these condiments on good hygienic and processing practices
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10394/25477https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2017.07.014
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168160517303112