Mycotoxigenic Fusarium species and zearalenone concentration in commercial maize kernels in northern Ghana.

Mycotoxin Res

Department of Biotechnology and Molecular Biology, Faculty of Biosciences, University for Development Studies, Nyankpala, Tamale, Ghana.

Published: November 2024

The fungal genus Fusarium contains many toxigenic pathogens of maize with associated yield losses, reduction of grain quality, and accumulation of mycotoxins in harvested grains. To determine zearalenone (ZEN) concentration and identify the various Fusarium species in commercial maize grains, a survey of 75 maize samples, collected from 11 market centers in the five regions in northern Ghana was identified based on morphological characteristics, sequence analysis of the internal transcribed spacer region, and polymerase chain reaction using species-specific primers. ZEN levels were determined using HPLC. ZEN contamination was recorded in 33.3% of the maize samples, with concentrations ranging from 0.61 to 3.05 µg/kg. Based on VERT1/2 and TEF 1-α sequencing, F. verticillioides was the most prevalent species in the studied samples: 40.35% from the Upper East Region, 28.07% from the North East Region, 19.30% from the Upper West Region, 10.53% from the Savannah Region, and 1.75% for the Northern Region. Other fungal species found were F. equiseti and F. solani. A higher number of the Fusarium isolates were found in white maize (609 isolates from 27 samples) compared to yellow maize (225 isolates from 23 samples).

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12550-024-00544-3DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

fusarium species
8
commercial maize
8
northern ghana
8
maize samples
8
east region
8
isolates samples
8
maize
7
region
6
samples
5
mycotoxigenic fusarium
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!