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Biochemie der Ernhrung

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Toxicology. Ames Test (Oct. 2003) ... Toxicology. Exposition (calculated by joint industry group, JIG) ... Toxicology. Conclusions 6,8 (available information 07/2003) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biochemie der Ernhrung


1
Issue Semicarbazid
  • A contaminant found in food jars

Update 14th April 2004
2
Semicarbazide (SEM)The Issue
  • Semicarbazide is found in Baby Food
  • SEM levels of up to 20 µg/kg were found in baby
    food
  • Baby food was analysed for SEM as marker for
    illegal vetenary drug use
  • SEM is a protein bound metabolite of the drug
    nitrofurazone

3
SemicarbazideChemical Data
  • Chemical Names
  • Semicarbazide hydrochloride1- Synonyms
    amidourea hydrochloride aminourea hydrochloride
    carbamylhydrazine
    hydrochloride hydrazinecarboxamide,
    monohydrochloride - CAS Nr. 563-41-7
    semicarbazide hydrochloride- formula CH6ClN3O
    MW 111.5 g/Mol

4
SemicarbazideToxicology
  • Toxicity6,8 (available information 07/2003)

5
SemicarbazideToxicology
  • Ames Test (Oct. 2003)
  • No mutagenicity observed in Salmonella
    typhimurium strains TA1537, TA98, TA100, TA102
    /- S9 up to 5000 ug per plate
  • Weak mutagenic response in strain TA1535 at 5000
    ug/plate
  • NoteSalmonella typhimurium TA102 normally
    detects mutagenic hydrazine derivatives
  • In-vivo UDS assay
  • No increase in UDS, no genotoxic effect

6
SemicarbazideToxicology
  • Exposition8
  • infant, 4 months
  • Not worst case 0,48 µg/kg body weight (daily
    intake of 190g jar food ( 1 glass jar),
    contaminated with 15 ppb SEM of a 6 kg weight
    baby)
  • Worst case 1,25 µg/kg body weight(daily intake
    of 360g jar food ( 3 glass jar á 125g),
    contaminated with 20 ppb SEM of a 6 kg weight
    baby)
  • Adults0,025 µg/kg body weight

Prof. Eisenbrand, Kaiserslautern, Germany
7
SemicarbazideToxicology
  • Exposition (calculated by joint industry group,
    JIG)
  • DONALD study Intakes of commercial baby food9

) 95th-percentile
An exposure of 1 µg/kg BW/day is unlikely to be
of concern for non-thresholded (cancer) effects.
The TD50 (dose producing tumor in 50 of the
animals) for SEM is 220 mg/kg BW/day.
8
SemicarbazideToxicology
  • Exposition (calculated by joint industry group,
    JIG)
  • Age-specific exposures to SEM (according to the
    intake of commercial baby food9 and assuming a
    contamination level of 20 ppb in all products)

) 95th-percentile
9
SemicarbazideToxicology
  • Conclusions 6,8 (available information 07/2003)
  • 2 studies indicated that SEM may cauce cancer in
    female mice ? data are insufficient for firm
    conclusions about mutagenicity
  • Birth defects are only shown for exposure levels
    very high compared to SEM detected in foods ? no
    matter of concern for teratogenicity

10
SemicarbazideMetabolite of Illegal Veterinary
Drugs?
  • Nitrofurans
  • Derivatives of 2-Nitrofurane
  • Nitrofurans are known mutagens and potentially
    cancerogenic
  • Fast metabolisation in the farm animals
  • Metabolites are used as indicators for the use of
    nitrofuranes
  • Since 1995 the use of nitrofuranes in the EU is
    forbidden? zero-tolerance is 1 µg/kg food

11
SemicarbazideMetabolite of Illegal Veterinary
Drugs?
Semicarbazide (protein bound metabolite )
Nitrofurazone (antibiotic)
add 2-Nitrobenzaldehyd in 0.2 M HCl, 12h at
RTEtOAc extraction
derivatised metabolite, analysis by LC-MS/MS
12
SemicarbazideContaminant from the Cap Gasket?
  • Industry labs showed that the food (used for
    filling the jars)was not the source of SEM
  • All closures of baby food seem to be involved but
    only some glass containers filled with other
    foods
  • Levels of 1 7 mg SEM/kg gasket material (baby
    food closures) have been determined(LUA,
    Dresden, Germany)
  • SEM contamination in baby foods 95th percentile
    20µg/kg, in other products 3µg/kg
  • High variation among different lotsof the same
    product mean 18ppb, range 5 50 ppb(migration
    by condensed water? Raeation with food matrix?)

13
SemicarbazideDecomposition Product of
Azodicarbonamide?
  • Closures for glass containers
  • Different foods (jams, sauces, ketchups, honey,
    juice drinks babyfoods) are filled in glass jars
  • Some closures are manufactured with a seal
    containing ADC

United States Department of Agriculture http//www
.agen.ufl.edu/foodsaf/he203.html
14
SemicarbazideDecomposition Product of
Azodicarbonamide?
  • Basic parts of a glass jar

http//www.ehcan.com/JarsClosure.html
15
SemicarbazideDecomposition Product of
Azodicarbonamide?
  • Closures for glass containers
  • Twist-off cap
  • Press-On Twist-Off (PT) closures

http//www.ehcan.com/JarsClosure.html
16
SemicarbazideDecomposition Product of
Azodicarbonamide?
  • Closures for baby food in glass containers
  • Nearly exclusively PT (Press-on Twist-off)
    closures Long shelf-life hermetic seal for
    Sterilised/Pasteurised foods in glass jars
  • Gives total protection against microbiological
    re-contamination (top- and side seal)
  • Gives consumer indication of leakage/spoilage
    (safety button)
  • Sealing Gasket is an ADC-foamed PVC Plastisol

17
SemicarbazideDecomposition Product of
Azodicarbonamide?
  • Foaming agents / Blowing agents5
  • organic nitrogen compounds (carbonates do not
    produce the desired fine, closed-cell structure
    in rubbers and plastics)
  • stable at normal storage and mixing temperatures
  • undergo controllable gas evolution at reasonable
    well-defined decomposition temperatures
  • are added to polymers in order to form minute gas
    cells throughout the plastic ? sealing gaskets
    for metal lids on glass bottles and jars
  • gases should provide low permeability through the
    polymersfor rubber CO2 (260) gtgt H2 (100) gt
    O2 (46) gt N2 (17)) relative values based on
    hydrogen as 100, but most seals are based on PVC

18
Azodicarbonamide (ADC)
  • Synonyms1 1,1'-azobiscarbamide
    1,1'-Azobisformamide Azodicarbonamide
    azobiscarboxamide azodicarboxylic acid diamide
    azoformamide Diazenedicarboxamide
    diazenedicarboxylic acid diamide
    C,C'-azodi(formamide) celosen az chkhz 21
    chkhz 21r delta(1,1')-biurea Genitron genitron
    ac genitron ac 2 genitron ac 4 kempore
    kempore 125 kempore r 125 lucel ada Nitropore
    pinhole ak 2 Porofor porofore 505 porofor
    adc/r porofor chkhz 21 porofor chkhz 21r
    Unifoam unifoam az uniform az yunihomu az
  • CAS Nr. 123-77-3- formula C2H4N4O2 MW 116.1
    g/Mol
  • Use2
  • blowing agent in plastics
  • Oxidative flour treatment (45 mg/kg flour, not
    EU)
  • Decomposition temperature 195-202 CAmount of
    gas generated 220 245 mL/gSolubility
    0.2g/L water, 0.1g/L methanol
    2.6g/L DMF, 43.8g/L DMSO

19
Azodicarbonamide Decomposition
  • decomposition speed and temperature of
    azodicarbonamide can be controlled by changing
    the type of resin and the use of different
    additives like metal salts4

20
Azodicarbonamide Synthesis
  • Synthesis according to (5)(1) formation of the
    intermediate biurea from urea and hydrazine(2)
    oxidation yielding azodicarbonamide

21
Azodicarbonamide Decomposition Reactions I4
22
Azodicarbonamide Decomposition Reactions II5
  • Dry decomposition (190 C)
  • under liquid paraffin (190 C)

Gaseous products19.8 nitrogen, 11.2 CO,1
NH3, CO2
Decomposition depends on the specific curing
conditions (see part of biurea)
23
Azodicarbonamide Safety Evaluation
  • Scientific Committee on Food (SCF) opinion (2003)
    on Azodicarbonamide (ADC)
  • Azodicarbonamide per se seems of minor
    toxicological significance except ist ability to
    induce asthmatic conditions in exposed workers
  • main problem are the formation of undesirable
    by-products
  • Formation of ethyl carbamate from
    azodicarbonamide containing materials in contact
    with alcoholic beverages3,4
  • Ethyl carbamate is a well known animal cancerogen
  • Conclusion Restriction for use only as a blowing
    reagent and not for
    materials intendet to come into contact with
    alcoholic beverages

24
Azodicarbonamide Safety Evaluation
  • SEM is present as an impurity in ADC, but at
    insignificant amounts compared to the formation
    of SEM after thermal treatment of ADC

25
Azodicarbonamide Substitution Products (Joint
Industry Group)
  • Non-PVC technology
  • Under development by cap suppliers
  • Major capital investment for babyfoods
  • long term option for industry
  • Sodium bicarbonate
  • First trial too high leakage rate
  • Last trials encouraging
  • Reduced bicarbonate particle size
  • Water scavenger to prevent reagglomeration

26
Azodicarbonamide Substitution Products (Joint
Industry Group)
  • First Trial

Sodium bicarbonate
Azodicarbonamide
TEMPERATURE
27
Azodicarbonamide Substitution Products (Joint
Industry Group)
  • First Trial
  • Trial volume 1,8 Mio glass jars (Aug. Dec.
    2003)
  • Dud rates (leakage) for pasteurized products are
    accepatable
  • Dud rates for sterilized products (80 on the
    market) about 50 times higher than minimum
    required
  • Major improvement required

28
Azodicarbonamide Substitution Products (Joint
Industry Group)
Second/Third TrialCompound with reduced
bicarbonate particle size
Improved cell structure
Compound 284 Ver. 1
Compound 071 (ADC)
Compound 284 Ver. 3
Sodium bicarbonate (1st trial) Sodium
bicarbonate (2nd trial) Azodicarbonamide
Conclusion Optimized / reduced sodium bicarbonate
particle size further improves compound cell
structure and surface.
29
Food Sources of SEMHypochlorite treated
Carrageenan10,11
  • SEM was detected in Carrageenan
  • Polysaccharide extracted from red seaweeds
  • Food additive (E 407) thickening agent
  • Applications
  • Ham, bacon, processed poultry, sausages
  • chocolate milk, dressings
  • Ice cream, yoghurt, pudding
  • Dessert jellies, fruit jam
  • Petfood
  • Toothpaste, airfreshner gels

30
Food Sources of SEMHypochlorite treated
Carrageenan10,11
drying
alkaline extraction
Red seaweed
drying
filtration, concentration, alcohol or salt
precipitation, drying
bleaching
grinding, blending
Semirefined Carrageenan (PES)
Carrageenan
31
Food Sources of SEMHypochlorite treated
Carrageenan10,11
  • SEM analyses (WEJ, Hamburg, Germany)
  • raw red seaweed 0.2 ppb
  • red seaweed, dried 2 ppb
  • Semirefined carrageenan (PES) before bleaching 7
    - 9 ppb
  • Semirefined carrageenan (PES) 10 - 100 ppb
  • Carrageenan lt 0.2 - 9 ppb

E 407a
E 407
32
Food Sources of SEMHypochlorite treated
Carrageenan10,11
  • Precursors11

33
Food Sources of SEMHypochlorite treated
Carrageenan10,11
NH3 NaOCl
NH2Cl
SEM
chloramine hypochlorite
creatine
arginine
urea
creatinine
citrulline
34
Semicarbazide Conclusion
  • semicarbazide is formed from azodicarbonamide
    which is used as blowing agent in sealing gaskets
  • Additional toxicological data have to be provided
  • Ames test (OECD Guideline 471)
  • In-vitro mammalian cell gene mutation test (OECD
    Guideline 476)
  • In-vitro mammalian chromosome aberration test
    (OECD Guideline 473)
  • Formation mechanism and conditions have to be
    elucidated
  • technical feasability of reduction or avoidance
    of SEM migration has to be checked
  • But using substitution products, the integrity
    of the seal must be garanteed and safely
    evaluated (microbiological contamination may be
    fatal for babies and infants)!
  • Flour treatment with azodicarbonamide has to be
    re-evaluated (risk benefit estimation)

35
Semicarbazide Conclusion
  • Commission Directive 2004/1/ECSuspension of the
    use of ADC as blowing agent from 2nd August 2005
    (filling date)
  • SEM was detected in different types of animal and
    vegetable tissues after a drying process
  • Thickening agents like carrageenan may be
    bleached by hypochlorite treatment, thereby
    reasonable amounts of SEM (10 100 ppb) may be
    formed from natural precursors
  • Urea, arginine, creatine, creatinine
  • Again, SEM cannot be taken to detect the use of
    the banned antibiotic nitrofurazone

36
SemicarbazideThe Issue - Chronology
  • prior to 1950 azodicarbonamide was suggested as
    potential foaming agent for plastics in Germany
  • End of 2002 routine analysis on nitrofuranes
    (antibiotics) and their metabolites by
    LC-MS/MS
  • Beginning 2003 unusual findings of semicarbazide
    (a nitrofurane metabolite) in food samples
    Semicarbazide levels of up to 15 µg/kg were
    found in baby food
  • 28.July 2003 The European Food Safety Authority
    (EFSA) gives a preliminary advice
    semicarbazide levels (up to 10 ppm) were
    detected in the cap gaskets of food jars
  • 31. July 2003 Comment of the German BfR
  • Oct. 2003 Ames test results (of ADC producer) are
    submitted to European and German authorities

37
SemicarbazideThe Issue - Chronology
  • Nov. 2003 2 matagenicity tests (chromosomal
    aberration in mammalian cells, HPRT test in
    mammalian cells) and mouse liver UDS in-vivo
    study shall be submitted to European and German
    authorities
  • Jan. 2004 Commission Directive 2004/1/EC Suspens
    ion of the use of ADC as blowing agent - Use
    of ADC prohibited from 2nd August 2005 (filling
    date)
  • mid-end 2004 industry tries to introduce SEM
    reduced or SEM free closure systems,
    respectively

38
References
  • http//www.chemfinder.com
  • Opinion of the Scientific Committee on Food on
    the 23rd additional list of monomers and
    additives for food contact materials, April
    2003http//europa.eu.int/comm/food/fs/sc/scf/out
    181_en.pdf
  • MJ. Dennis, RC. Massey, R. Ginn, P. Willetts, C.
    Crews, I. Parker The contribution of
    azodicarbonamide to ethyl carbamate formation in
    bread and beer. Food Addit. Contam. 14101-108
    (1997).
  • http//www.otsukany.com/decompos.htm
  • BA. Hunter Chemical Foaming AgentsChemistry and
    Decomposition Mechanismshttp//www.cromptoncorp.c
    om/ck_prd/gnsg_ax_ex_x_cfachemistrydecompositionme
    chanisms.pdf
  • Advice of the ad hoc expert group set up to
    advice the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)
    on the possible occurence of semicarbazide in
    packaged foods 28.07.2003http//www.efsa.eu.int/p
    df/p_afc_doc_01.pdf
  • FAO Nutrition Meetings, Report Series No.
    40A,B,C WHO/Food Add./67.29Toxicological
    Evaluation of some antimicrobials, antooxidants,
    emulsifiers, stabilizers, flour-treatment agents,
    acids and baseshttp//www.inchem.org/documents/je
    cfa/jecmono/40abcj28.htm
  • BfR Semicarbazid als Kontaminante in
    glasverpacktn Lebensmitteln, vorläufige Bewertung
    vom 31. Juli 2003http//www.bgvv.de/cms/detail.ph
    p?templateinternet_de_index_js
  • Kersting M., Alexy U., Sichert-Hellert W., Manz
    F. and Schöch G. Measured consumption of
    commercial infant food products in German
    infants Results from the DONALD study. J.
    Pediatr. Gastroenterology Nutr. 27 547-552
    (1998).
  • Gatermann, R., Hoenicke, K., Mandix, M.
    (Wierts-Eggert-Jörissen, Hamburg, Germany)
    Formation of semicarbazide (SEM) from natural
    compounds in different kind of food products,
    Lecture, Prague Nov. 2003.

39
References
  • Hoenicke, K., Gatermann, R., Hartig, L., Mandix,
    M. and Otte, S. Formation of Semicarbazide (SEM)
    in Food by hypochlorite treatment Is SEM a
    Specific Marker for Nitrofurazone Abuse? Food
    additives and Contaminants (in press)
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