Food Toxicology final exam
What is goiter? What are the causes?
Goitrogens inhibit synthesis of thyroid hormone or iodine uptake, therefore goiter (enlarged thyroid gland) may occur due to goitrogen exposure. Goirtogens found in brassica plants
How does solanine interfere neurotransmission?
Solanine inhibits the activity of acetylcholinesterase (blocks the enzyme) • 1. Acetylcholine neurotransmitter is released from nerve ending • 2. Acetylcholine attaches to its receptors, causing the muscle to contract • 3. Acetylcholinesterase enzyme breaks apart acetylcholine, thereby removing it from its receptors and allowing the muscle to relax o Solanine inhibits the activity of acetylcholinesterase.
Which fish and shellfish poisoning(s) is associated with red tide?
(PSP) Saxitoxin and Amnesic Shellfish poisoning (Domoic Acid)
Acute toxicity test
- Adverse effect occurring by a short time. Administration of a single dose or multiple doses given in 24 hours and extensive tissue damage -Ex: Hydrogen cyanide inhaled by dogs led to immediate coma or death
Acceptable Daily Intake
-Acceptable Daily Intake (ADI) = ED99 -ADI is the amount of a chemical a person can be exposed to on a daily basis over an extended period of time (usually a lifetime) without suffering deleterious effects.
Common limitations in animal and human research studies
...
Exposure to a teratogenic influence at around how many months of gestation is most likely to produce anatomical defects in the developing fetus?
0 to 2 months
Observational Study
A study just observing certain phenomenon, you are not changing their lifestyle Ex: Observing people who only eat organically to see if they are really healthier than those who don't
Risk Assessment
A systematic scientific characterization of potential adverse health effects following exposure to hazardous agents
fat soluble vitamins
ADEK
What is the cause of favism?
Acute hemolytic anemia due to consumption of raw or cooked fava beans. It is a sex-linked, inherited disease.
Chronic Toxicity test
Adverse effects resulting from long-term, low-level exposure which would not be evident in subchronic testing; Mostly rodents are selected; Dosed daily; Cover major portion of lifespan
Assuming two students have the same dose of exposure to a toxicant, but one student has faster rate to detoxify a toxicant in the liver than the other student. Could you get two possible reasons?
Age -The activities of many enzymes are lower in babies than adult Gender -The activity of UDP-glucuronosyltransferase is 47% higher in male rats than in female rats
Ames Test
Ames test (bacterial reverse mutation assay): a test for determining if a chemical is a mutagen/carcinogen devised by Dr. Ames in 1973 (assuming a substance that is mutagenic for the bacteria may also turn out to be a carcinogen). It is a short-term in vitro test.
in vivo
Animal trial. Healthy animals; animals with same strain/species, similar age and weight range, and genetically stable Control group is required Detailed records are maintained for each animal Pathological examination is required after completion of toxicity test
What do antioxidants do? Examples?
Antioxidants can neutralize free radicals, and prevent oxidation of other chemicals. Examples:•Ascorbic acid (vitamin C), α-Tocopherol (vitamin E), BHA&BHT
water soluble vitamins
BC
What toxic substance is associated with inappropriately processed cassava root
Cyanide
Exposure assessment
Determine the amount, frequency, duration and route of exposure (chemicals enter your body through skin, respiratory system, ingestion)
Endocytosis
Energy (ATP) is needed to move molecules across membrane (cell membrane is extended to engulf molecules) Ex: white blood cells
The products (metabolites) from Phase 1 reactions of biotransformation are always less toxic than their parent substances
FALSE
Which plant toxin had been used as a contraceptive?
Gossypol for men in China
grapefruit juice should not be taken together with some medicines. Could you explain the reason?
Grapefruit juice has the chemicals to inhibit Phase 1 reaction -In this case medicine could not be broken down so an overdose could happen
Subchronic Toxicity test
Harmful/ adverse effects occurring by daily or frequent exposure to a toxic substance over a period of time; Two species (rodents and nonrodents) to be tested
What is FAS (fetal alcohol syndrome)?
Infants born to mothers who drink, even in modest amounts, may be born with fetal alcohol syndrome, which often consists of growth retardation, unusual facial features, and mental retardation.
What is the primary site for biotransformation?
LIVER
Where is bile made, stored and secreted?
Made in the liver, stored in the gallbladder, secreted in the small intestine
Why are food additives used in foods?
Maintain the quality of foods -Antioxidants, preservatives Provide essential agent in processing -Emulsifiers, thickeners, etc Provide more nutrients -Vitamin-fortified foods Make foods appealing -Coloring agents, flavor enhancer, etc Substitutes of sugar and fat -Artificial sweeteners and artificial fat
Risk Communication
Make risk assessment and risk management comprehensible to the public
Margin of Safety for food additive
NOEL/ED99=100
Spinach may impair mineral absorption in the digestive tract because of the presence of the anti nutrient, _____________, in spinach
Oxalic acid/ oxalate
The basic difference between Phase 1 and Phase 2 reactions are
Phase 1 reactions oxidize or reduce the substance wheras Phase 2 reactions conjugate a substrate
Risk
Probability that the hazard will occur under specific exposure condition
Delaney Clause
Prohibits the use of food additives shown to cause cancer in humans and animals ("zero tolerance" concept)
What alkaloid is used to flavor tonic water
Quinine
Which shellfish/fish poisoning is not caused by the presence of neurotoxins?
Scombroid
What seafood poisoning causes the symptoms similar to allergy?
Scombroid poisoning -histamine is produced
In vitro
Test tube studies.To determine mutagenic/carcinogenic potential or physiological changes with the exposure to a substance in cell cultures or bacteria.
Is the toxicant metabolized into a less toxic compound after phase 1 reaction?
The outcome can either be more toxic (bioactivation) or less toxic (detoxification)
Interventional study
The researcher intervenes in the study Ex: Say I want to see the effects that eating Chipotle for a week has on someone's health so I change their eating habits to be only chipotle for a week
Which alkaloid in chocolate is toxic to dogs?
Theobromine -Dogs should avoid chocolate because of slow metabolism of theobromine ●The half life of theobromine: ~2-3 hrs in humans; ~18 hrs in dogs
Genetic Toxicity Test
To determine the tendency of a substance to induce mutations in a test organism.
How are toxic substances metabolized in the body?
Toxic substances are metabolized in the body by transforming the substance into new chemicals called metabolites
How come some foods cannot be eaten together with medicines act as MAO inhibitors?
Vasoactive amines can be metabolized by MAO. The toxicity of vasoactive amines show up when there is no MAO. We have an enzyme (MAO) in our body to degrade vasoactive amines
What vitamin is added to nitrite cured meat to lessen nitrosamine formation?
Vitamin C (ascorbate)
Anecdotal evidence
What are the flaws you may find in many claims related to food and nutrition? Give one example.
From the slope of the curve we can learn the rate at which a toxic effect (or beneficial effect) builds up A steeper slope tells us the response rate increases very quickly, the chemical is more toxic & not very tolerable
What can you learn from comparing slopes of cumulative response curves of different toxins?
Safety is freedom from danger, injury, or damage. Absolute safety of a substance cannot be proven
What is the definition of safety?
If A has a bigger value of MOS it means that it is safer than drug B MOS >3= okay medicine, safe for general public MOS= 10 means the curves are really far apart
When you compare two medicines, A and B, what does it mean if A has bigger value of MOS than B?
the dose
Whether a chemical is harmful or beneficial depends largely on
Facilitated diffusion
a carrier-mediated transport of water soluble substances that mimic the structures of endogenous substances that normally exist in the body. NO NEED OF ATP Ex: glucose transporter
Risk Characterization
a process of estimating the probable incidence of an adverse effect to human who is under the circumstances of exposure. (Combination of hazard identification, dose-response assessment, exposure assessment)
Active Transport
active transport requires ATP for energy, works against substrate concentration gradients (low->high), and is saturable. ATP is needed to move molecules across membrane
Food allergy
an altered immunological reactivity to a foreign material (allergen).
Chromatography
an elegant method of chemical separation. Using only a few simple principles, this method can separate and purify practically all chemicals. -The mobile phase (containing the substance of interest) moves through the stationary phase, and the chemicals in mobile phase will migrate at different rates through the stationary phase. The separation of chemicals is on the basis of small differences in sizes, charges, affinity to compounds in the stationary phase, etc.
Lecithin
an emulsifier in food processing, they attract both water and fatty substances o Lecithin makes a good emulsifier because the hydrophobic end dissolves in oil droplets and the hydrophilic end dissolves in water (stops oil and water from splitting) -located in the cell membrane
Red tide
an overabundance of nutrients in the water leads to an over production of algae (dinoflagellates). Algae releases neurotoxins and use up oxygen in the water. This results in the death of fish population (but shellfish can survive).
Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA)
average daily level of intake sufficient to meet the nutrient requirements of nearly all (97%-98%) healthy people.
Retrospective study
collecting information from the past Ex: Does eating a lot of meat cause stomach cancer? Collect information from someone's eating habits This would NOT make sense as a prospective study because you're not gonna start feeding someone BBQ meat to see if they get cancer
Cross sectional study
data are collected on the whole study population at a single point in time to examine the relationship between disease (or other health related state) and other variables of interest. Ex: find bone density for people at the age of 20 Ex: An example of a cross-sectional study would be a medical study looking at the prevalence of breast cancer in a population. The researcher can look at a wide range of ages, ethnicities and social backgrounds. If a significant number of women from a certain social background are found to have the disease, then the researcher can investigate further
Risk Management
decision making, development of regulatory options, evaluation of public health, economic, social and political context for options, involvement of more related communities in decision making
Dose-response assessment
determine relationship between dose and response (What dose causes a response?)
Dominant Lethal Test
determines genetic changes in mammals.
Sucrose
disaccharide sugar. made of glucose and fructose
Simple diffusion
fat soluble molecules move across lipid membranes, small water-soluble molecules move across water pores, NO NEED OF ENERGY (ATP) moving direction: follow concentration gradient (high -> low), can penetrate cell membranes w/out energy
GRAS list
generally recognized as safe -Common use in foods prior to January 1, 1958 without known detrimental effects or health hazards
food intolerance
has nothing to do with the immune system. its just an attack of enzymes or lack of enzymes needed to digest a specific food. Ex: lactose intolerance
Tolerable upper intake level (UL)
highest intake level with no risk of adverse effect increase to almost all individuals
coloring agent "lake"
insoluble form (mix dyes with aluminum hydroxide) used in items containing fat/oil or lacking sufficient moisture, e.g., coated tablets, chewing gum, cake mix, hard candies, etc.
What organ is at risk if we ingest pyrrolizidine alkaloid?
liver
What are the major routes of exposure?
o Digestive system: Important for environmental exposure to food and water contaminants; major route for medicine/drug o Respiratory Tract: Important for environmental and occupational to air contaminants; some medicine/drugs utilize this route o Skin: An important environmental and occupational exposure route; many consumer and pharmaceutical products are applied directly to skin
Enterohepatic cycle
o Liver (via bile) --> small intestine--> portal vein--> liver o Prolongs the life of a xenobiotic in the body
What are the primary storage sites for toxic substances in the body?
o Liver and kidneys: storage of azo dye, cadmium o Lipid cells: sink for lipid-soluble substance (DDT, PCB) o Bone: ions (similar to Calcium) o Thyroid gland: iodine; Goiter (iodine deficiency)Hair, nail, skin: arsenic oAdipose tissue: for lipid soluble toxicants
P-value
o The probability range (or p value), which is commonly used, generally is accepted to be less than 0.05. This value indicates that the same LD or TD value would be obtained in 95 out of a hypothetical 100 repetitions of the experiment. o If P <.05 you reject the hypothesis
What does phase 1 reaction do?
o Transform non-polar compounds into more polar compounds(can get along with water) by oxidation (see below), reduction and hydrolysis o Toxins may become more toxic (bioactivation) or less toxic (bioinactivation or detoxification) o The most important enzyme system: cytochrome P-450
Routes of Excretion
o Urinary excretion by urinary system: most chemicals o Fecal excretion by GI system: unabsorbed substances and bile o Exhaled air by respiratory system. o Others: sweat, milk, tears, saliva
How does alcohol affect neurotransmission?
o When alcohol enters the brain it delivers a double sedative punch. First, it interacts with GABA receptors to make them even more inhibitory (slowing down or preventing a process, reaction, or function.) o Second, it binds to glutamate receptors, preventing the glutamate from exciting the cell. o Alcohol particularly affects the areas of the brain involved in memory formation, decision making and impulse control.
What does the Phase 2 reaction do?
oConjugate a component (mostly polar components) to make previously oxidized/reduced compounds hydrophilic and ready for excretion• oThe most important phase II reaction is glucuronidation (conjugate glucuronic acid). Other reactions include: sulfation ( conjugate sulfonate, "-SO3-"), and acetylation (conjugate "-CH2COOH"), etc.
Nitrosamines
oNitrate combined with amines during cooking or in the stomach --> Nitrosamines - Nitrosamines can cause mutation of DNA--> changes of DNA sequence may lead to cancer. Nitrosamines can also be found in cigarette smoke.
Sodium nitrite's role in the curing of meat
oPreventing botulism (inhibit the growth of C. botulinum) oGiving meat a distinctive pink/red color) oGiving desirable "cured" flavors
Which fish produces tetrodotoxin?
pufferfish
Margin of Safety (MOS ) medicine
ratio of lethal dose to 1% of the population to the Effective Dose to 99% of the population LD1/ED99
nonspecific (systemic) toxic effect
sometimes may occur at multiple sites EX:Strong acids and bases cause protein denaturation Protein denaturation=change of protein shape
Hazard Identification
the act of determining what the hazard is and its ability to cause harm
The fundamental concept of food toxicology
the dose determines the toxicity
dose-response relationship
the dose determines the toxicity, there are toxic and non toxic doses in any substance
NOEL
the highest dose of a substance that does not result in the appearance of a defined physiological or biochemical response
Longitudinal Study
the main variable is time, following an individual or a group for many years Ex: pregnancy outcomes with high protein diets, follow women during their pregnancy journey
selective toxic effect
toxic effect at a specific site (e.g., toxic effect to damage the liver, toxic effect to damage/interfere the nerve cells)
Absolute safety of a food additive cannot be proven
true
Prospective study
watches for outcomes
Coloring agent "dye"
water-soluble form used in beverages
Objectives of Risk Assessment
• Balance risk and benefits • Set target levels of risk • Set priorities for program organizations • Estimate residual risks and extent of risk reduction after steps are taken to reduce risks