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  • Title: Mutagenicity of deep-frying fat, and evaluation of urine mutagenicity after consumption of fried potatoes.
    Author: Hageman G, Hermans R, ten Hoor F, Kleinjans J.
    Journal: Food Chem Toxicol; 1990 Feb; 28(2):75-80. PubMed ID: 2341091.
    Abstract:
    Mutagen formation during deep-frying was evaluated using standard frying conditions. Portions of pre-fried, sliced potatoes were fried in a commercial brand of hydrogenated vegetable frying fat, which was used repeatedly and for a prolonged period of time. Concentrations of polar oxidation and degradation products, and of dimeric and polymeric triglycerides, were found to increase in the frying fat as well as in fried potatoes with prolonged use of the fat. Thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances were detectable neither in the frying fat nor in the fried potatoes. Polar fractions of repeatedly used frying fat significantly increased the number of revertants in Salmonella typhimurium strain TA97 without S-9 mix. In the presence of S-9 mix mutagenic activity was reduced. As a consequence of ongoing formation of polar degradation and oxidation products, the mutagenicity of the fat increased after repeated use. Polar fractions of lipids extracted from commercially obtained pre-fried potatoes, as well as from fried potatoes, marginally increased the number of revertants in strain TA97 without S-9 mix. The mutagenicity of the lipid fractions of fried potatoes was not related to the heating time of the fat. Methanol extracts of fat-free residues of fried potatoes significantly increased numbers of revertants in strain TA97 after metabolic activation, which indicated that a different class of mutagens had been isolated. The mutagenicity of methanol extracts was not increased after either prolonged or repeated use of the fat. Urine samples of six healthy, non-smoking volunteers, collected during the 24 hr following consumption of portions of potatoes fried in repeatedly used fat, showed no increase in mutagenicity compared with control samples. Since the exact identity of mutagens formed during deep-frying, as well as their metabolic fate in man, is unclear at present, evaluation of possible adverse biological effects associated with consumption of fried foods will require strictly controlled metabolic studies.
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