Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office(FK138184)
(RRF-2.3.1-21-2022-00007)
Mycotoxins are bioaccumulative contaminants impacting animals and humans. The simultaneous
detection of frequent active exposures and accumulated mycotoxin level (s) in exposed
organisms would be the most ideal to enable appropriate actions. However, few methods
are available for the purpose, and there is a demand for dedicated, sensitive, reliable,
and practical assays. To demonstrate the issue, mice were exposed to a relevant agent
Ochratoxin A (OTA), and accumulated OTA was measured by fine-tuned commercial assays.
Quantitative high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection, enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assay, and flow cytometry assays have been developed/modified using
reagents available as commercial products when appropriate. Assays were performed
on excised samples, and results were compared. Accumulated OTA could be detected and
quantified; positive correlations (between applied doses of exposure and accumulated
OTA levels and the results from assays) were found. Dedicated assays could be developed,
which provided comparable results. The presence and accumulation of OTA following
even a short exposure could be quantitatively detected. The assays performed similarly,
but HPLC had the greatest sensitivity. Blood contained higher levels of OTA than liver
and kidney. We demonstrate that specific but flexible and practical assays should
be used for specific/local purposes, to measure the exposure itself and accumulation
in blood or organs.