Effects of chronic low doses aflatoxin B1 exposure in lactating dairy Florida goats

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Author
Mora-Medina, Rafael
Lora-Benítez, Antonio
Molina López, Ana María
Ayala-Soldado, Nahúm
Moyano Salvago, M. Rosario
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2023Subject
Aflatoxin B1Aflatoxin M1
carryover
Mycotoxins
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Show full item recordAbstract
In the past few years there has been a growing trend
in the prevalence of aflatoxins, attributable to climate
change, in substances destined for animal feeding, together with an increase in dairy product consumption.
These facts have triggered great concern in the scientific
community over milk pollution by aflatoxin M1.
Therefore, our study aimed to determine the transfer of
aflatoxin B1 from the diet into milk as AFM1 in goats
exposed to different concentrations of AFB1, and its
possible effect on the production and serological parameters of this species. For this purpose, 18 goats in
late lactation were divided into 3 groups (n = 6) and
exposed to different daily doses of aflatoxin B1 (T1 =
120 μg; T2 = 60 μg, and control = 0 μg), during 31
d. Pure aflatoxin B1 was administered 6 h before each
milking in an artificially contaminated pellet. The milk
samples were taken individually in sequential samples.
Milk yield and feed intake were recorded daily, and a
blood sample was extracted on the last day of exposure.
No aflatoxin M1 was detected, either in the samples
taken before the first administration, or in the control
group ones. The aflatoxin M1 concentration detected
in the milk (T1 = 0.075 μg/kg; T2 = 0.035 μg/kg) increased significantly on a par with the amount of aflatoxin B1 ingested. The amount of aflatoxin B1 ingested did not have any influence on aflatoxin M1 carryover (T1 = 0.066% and T2 = 0.060%), these being considerably lower than those described in dairy goats. Thus, we concluded that the concentration of aflatoxin M1 in milk follows a linear relationship with respect to the
aflatoxin B1 ingested, and that the aflatoxin M1 carryover
was not affected by the administration of different
aflatoxin B1 doses. Similarly, no significant changes in
the production parameters after chronic exposure to aflatoxin B1 were observed, revealing a certain resistance of the goat to the possible effects of that aflatoxin.