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  • Title: [Cold storage of wheat. 1. Ergosterol, ochratoxin A and citrinin after inoculation with Penicillium verrucosum].
    Author: Müller HM, Boley A.
    Journal: Arch Tierernahr; 1992; 42(3-4):351-63. PubMed ID: 1296563.
    Abstract:
    Seed wheat was inoculated without having been sterilized with an ochratoxin A and citrinin forming strain of Penicillium verrucosum and stored at moisture contents of 18, 20, 22, 24, and 26% at 10 and 4 degrees C. The production of ergosterol, a chemical indicator of fungal biomass, started within the storage time investigated (240 days). Only at 18% H2O/4 degrees C an increase of the ergosterol content was not observed. Ochratoxin A and Citrinin were not detected at 18% H2O/4 degrees C and 20% H2O/4 degrees C within 240 days (detection limit: 10 and 25 micrograms/kg, respectively). At the other combinations of moisture content and temperature the first detection of the two toxins approximately coincided with the onset of ergosterol production. With increasing moisture content and temperature the time up to the start of ergosterol production decreased, whereas the production rates of ergosterol, ochratoxin A and citrinin increased. Both toxins were produced with about the same rate during a first phase of accumulation. At 20-26% H2O there was no influence of moisture content and temperature on the relation between toxin content and the simultaneously reached ergosterol content. It is recommended that wheat highly contaminated with Penicillium verrucosum should not be stored beyond the start of ergosterol production.
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