AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores using eco-friendly agro-waste materials from kale and lettuce as alternatives to conventional inorganic binders for adsorbing the carcinogen aflatoxin B (AFB).
  • A dynamic gastrointestinal model was used to assess the effectiveness of these materials, revealing that the kale biosorbent had a maximum adsorption capacity of 93.6%, outperforming the lettuce biosorbent's 83.7%.
  • Characterization of the interaction mechanisms showed that both non-electrostatic (like hydrophobic and hydrogen bonding) and electrostatic interactions, along with AFB-chlorophyll complex formation, significantly contribute to the biosorption process.

Article Abstract

Adsorption of the carcinogen aflatoxin B (AFB) onto agro-waste-based materials is a promising alternative over conventional inorganic binders. In the current study, two unmodified adsorbents were eco-friendly prepared from kale and lettuce agro-wastes. A dynamic gastrointestinal tract-simulated model was utilized to evaluate the removal efficiency of the sorptive materials (0.5%, ) when added to an AFB-contaminated diet (100 µg AFB/kg). Different characterization methodologies were employed to understand the interaction mechanisms between the AFB molecule and the biosorbents. Based on adsorption results, the biosorbent prepared from kale was the best; its maximum adsorption capacity was 93.6%, which was significantly higher than that of the lettuce biosorbent (83.7%). Characterization results indicate that different mechanisms may act simultaneously during adsorption. Non-electrostatic (hydrophobic interactions, dipole-dipole interactions, and hydrogen bonding) and electrostatic interactions (ionic attractions) together with the formation of AFB-chlorophyll complexes appear to be the major influencing factors driving AFB biosorption.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8617829PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/toxins13110771DOI Listing

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