Monday, September 15, 2008

Mutagenicity of smoked, dried bonito products.



Kikugawa K, Kato T, Hayatsu H.
Mutagens have been found in smoked, dried bonito products, popular items in Japanese foods. The mutagens were isolated by means of blue cotton, an absorbent cotton preparation with covalently bound trisulfo-copper-phthalocyanine residues, and by means of XAD-2 resin. The mutagenicity was positive in Salmonella typhimurium strain TA98 with metabolic activation. The mutagens are produced during the process of smoking-and-drying bonito (a process called baikan). The activity was much higher than that expected from the content of benzo[a]pyrene. In contrast to benzo[a]pyrene, the mutagens were not inhibited by ellagic acid. The mutagenicity was not abolished by treatment with nitrite. Thin-layer and high-performance liquid chromatographic analysis gave two mutagenic fractions, both of which were distinguishable from benzo[a]pyrene and from the pyrolysis products Trp-P-1, Trp-P-2, Glu-P-1, Glu-P-2, A alpha C and MeA alpha C. The major mutagenic component was not chromatographically distinguishable from IQ and MeIQx, and the minor one was very similar to MeIQ. The smoked, dried bonito products contained free fatty acids, which were inhibitory to the mutagenicity of the bonito products.
PMID: 3900718 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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