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Research on the origin, and on the impact of post-harvest handling and manufacturing on the presence of ochratoxin A in coffee.
Food Addit Contam. 2002 Jul; 19(7):655-65.FA

Abstract

The major risk factors and processing steps that can lead to contamination of green coffee with ochratoxin A (OTA) have been identified. Surveys of the green coffee production chain indicate that Aspergillus ochraceus and A. carbonarius are the most potent OTA producers on coffee. Both have been successfully grown in vitro on green coffee and coffee cherries, respectively, producing high amounts of OTA (5-13 mg kg(-1)). The so-called dry processing of coffee, which is cherry drying, was identified as one of the steps during which OTA formation can take place, particularly under humid tropical conditions. Cherries contain sufficient amounts of water to support mould growth and OTA formation during the initial 3-5 days of drying on the outer part of the cherries. Not surprisingly, after dehulling, husks can be highly contaminated with OTA, as also indicated by its enhanced concentration in soluble coffees adulterated with husks and parchment. A minimum water activity of 0.80 (about 14% MC) is required for in vitro OTA production on green coffee, a fact that does not rule out the possibility of OTA contamination due to improper transportation and storage of green coffee. However, this appears not to be a major route for OTA contamination of coffee. OTA contamination can clearly be minimized by following good agricultural practice and a subsequent post-harvest handling consisting of appropriate techniques for drying, grading, transportation and storage of green coffee; these procedures are well established.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Nestlé R&D Centre Shanghai Ltd, No. 13 Qiao Nan, Cao An Road, Jia Ding District, Shanghai 201812, PR China. peter.bucheli@rdsh.nestle.comNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12113660

Citation

Bucheli, P, and M H. Taniwaki. "Research On the Origin, and On the Impact of Post-harvest Handling and Manufacturing On the Presence of Ochratoxin a in Coffee." Food Additives and Contaminants, vol. 19, no. 7, 2002, pp. 655-65.
Bucheli P, Taniwaki MH. Research on the origin, and on the impact of post-harvest handling and manufacturing on the presence of ochratoxin A in coffee. Food Addit Contam. 2002;19(7):655-65.
Bucheli, P., & Taniwaki, M. H. (2002). Research on the origin, and on the impact of post-harvest handling and manufacturing on the presence of ochratoxin A in coffee. Food Additives and Contaminants, 19(7), 655-65.
Bucheli P, Taniwaki MH. Research On the Origin, and On the Impact of Post-harvest Handling and Manufacturing On the Presence of Ochratoxin a in Coffee. Food Addit Contam. 2002;19(7):655-65. PubMed PMID: 12113660.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Research on the origin, and on the impact of post-harvest handling and manufacturing on the presence of ochratoxin A in coffee. AU - Bucheli,P, AU - Taniwaki,M H, PY - 2002/7/13/pubmed PY - 2002/9/11/medline PY - 2002/7/13/entrez SP - 655 EP - 65 JF - Food additives and contaminants JO - Food Addit Contam VL - 19 IS - 7 N2 - The major risk factors and processing steps that can lead to contamination of green coffee with ochratoxin A (OTA) have been identified. Surveys of the green coffee production chain indicate that Aspergillus ochraceus and A. carbonarius are the most potent OTA producers on coffee. Both have been successfully grown in vitro on green coffee and coffee cherries, respectively, producing high amounts of OTA (5-13 mg kg(-1)). The so-called dry processing of coffee, which is cherry drying, was identified as one of the steps during which OTA formation can take place, particularly under humid tropical conditions. Cherries contain sufficient amounts of water to support mould growth and OTA formation during the initial 3-5 days of drying on the outer part of the cherries. Not surprisingly, after dehulling, husks can be highly contaminated with OTA, as also indicated by its enhanced concentration in soluble coffees adulterated with husks and parchment. A minimum water activity of 0.80 (about 14% MC) is required for in vitro OTA production on green coffee, a fact that does not rule out the possibility of OTA contamination due to improper transportation and storage of green coffee. However, this appears not to be a major route for OTA contamination of coffee. OTA contamination can clearly be minimized by following good agricultural practice and a subsequent post-harvest handling consisting of appropriate techniques for drying, grading, transportation and storage of green coffee; these procedures are well established. SN - 0265-203X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12113660/Research_on_the_origin_and_on_the_impact_of_post_harvest_handling_and_manufacturing_on_the_presence_of_ochratoxin_A_in_coffee_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -