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Bioenergetic Status of the Intestinal and Hepatic Cells after Short Term Exposure to Fumonisin B1 and Aflatoxin B1

International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2022 21 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Mohamed F. Abdallah, Xiangrong Chen, Mohamed F. Abdallah, Xiangrong Chen, Charlotte Grootaert, Mohamed F. Abdallah, Charlotte Grootaert, Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Charlotte Grootaert, Charlotte Grootaert, Charlotte Grootaert, Charlotte Grootaert, Charlotte Grootaert, Charlotte Grootaert, Charlotte Grootaert, Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Mohamed F. Abdallah, Mohamed F. Abdallah, Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković Andreja Rajković

Summary

Researchers found that the food contaminants fumonisin B1 and aflatoxin B1 significantly disrupted mitochondrial function in intestinal and liver cells, reducing oxygen consumption, altering membrane potential, and increasing reactive oxygen species production.

Body Systems
Study Type In vitro

Fumonisin B1 (FB1) and aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) are frequent contaminants of staple foods such as maize. Oral exposure to these toxins poses health hazards by disrupting cellular signaling. However, little is known regarding the multifaced mitochondrial dysfunction-linked toxicity of FB1 and AFB1. Here, we show that after exposure to FB1 and AFB1, mitochondrial respiration significantly decreased by measuring the oxygen consumption rate (OCR), mitochondrial membrane potential (MMP) and reactive oxygen species (ROS). The current work shows that the integrity of mitochondria (MMP and ROS), that is the central component of cell apoptosis, is disrupted by FB1 and AFB1 in undifferentiated Caco-2 and HepG2 cells as in vitro models for human intestine and liver, respectively. It hypothesizes that FB1 and AFB1 could disrupt the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) to induce mitochondrial dysfunction and break the balance of transferring H<sup>+</sup> between the mitochondrial inner membrane and mitochondrial matrix, however, the proton leak is not increasing and, as a result, ATP synthesis is blocked. At the sub-toxic exposure of 1.0 µg/mL for 24 h, i.e., a viability of 95% in Caco-2 and HepG2 cells, the mitochondrial respiration was, however, stimulated. This suggests that the treated cells could reserve energy for mitochondrial respiration with the exposure of FB1 and AFB1, which could be a survival advantage.

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