posted on 2017-05-11, 00:00authored byYinan Wang, K. K. Jason Chan, Wan Chan
Environmental
pollution caused by the discharge of mutagenic and carcinogenic nitrofurans
to the aquatic and soil environment is an emerging public health concern
because of the potential in producing drug-resistant microbes and
being uptaken by food crops. Using liquid chromatography–tandem
mass spectrometry analysis and with spring onion (Allium
wakegi Araki) as the plant model, we investigated
in this study the plant uptake and accumulation of nitrofuran from
a contaminated environment. Our study revealed for the first time
high uptake and accumulation rates of nitrofuran in the edible parts
of the food crop. Furthermore, results indicated highly efficient
plant metabolism of the absorbed nitrofuran within the plant, leading
to the formation of genotoxic hydrazine-containing metabolites. The
results from this study may disclose a previously unidentified human
exposure pathway through contaminated food crops.