Department of Occupational and Environmental Health, School of Public Health, Wuhan University, Wuhan 430071, PR China.
Department of Chemistry, National University of Singapore, 3 Science Drive 3, Singapore 117543, Singapore.
Sci Total Environ. 2023 Dec 20;905:167313. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.167313. Epub 2023 Sep 22.
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) have attracted increasing attention due to their environmental persistence and potential toxicity. Diet is one of the main routes of human exposure to PFAS, particularly through the consumption of animal-derived foods (e.g., aquatic products, livestock and poultry, and products derived from them). This review summarizes the source, bioaccumulation, and distribution of PFAS in animal-derived foods and key influential factors. In most environmental media, perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluorooctane sulfonate are the dominant PFAS, with the levels of short-chain PFAS such as perfluorobutyric acid and perfluorohexane sulfonate surpassing them in some watersheds and coastal areas. The presence of PFAS in environmental media is mainly influenced by suspended particulate matter, microbial communities as well as temporal and spatial factors, such as season and location. Linear PFAS with long carbon chains (C ≥ 7) and sulfonic groups tend to accumulate in organisms and contribute significantly to the contamination of animal-derived foods. Furthermore, PFAS, due to their protein affinity, are prone to accumulate in the blood and protein-rich tissues such as the liver and kidney. Species differences in PFAS bioaccumulation are determined by diet, variances in protein content in the blood and tissues and species-specific activity of transport proteins. Carnivorous fish usually show higher PFAS accumulation than omnivorous fish. Poultry typically metabolize PFAS more rapidly than mammals. PFAS exposures in the processing of animal-derived foods are also attributable to the migration of PFAS from food contact materials, especially those in higher-fat content foods. The human health risk assessment of PFAS exposure from animal-derived foods suggests that frequent consumption of aquatic products potentially engender greater risks to women and minors than to adult males. The information and perspectives from this review would help to further identify the toxicity and migration mechanism of PFAS in animal-derived foods and provide information for food safety management.
全氟和多氟烷基物质(PFAS)因其环境持久性和潜在毒性而受到越来越多的关注。饮食是人类接触 PFAS 的主要途径之一,特别是通过食用动物源性食品(如水产、畜禽及其制品)。本文综述了 PFAS 在动物源性食品中的来源、生物累积和分布以及关键影响因素。在大多数环境介质中,全氟辛酸和全氟辛烷磺酸是主要的 PFAS,而在一些流域和沿海地区,短链 PFAS(如全氟丁酸和全氟己烷磺酸)的水平超过了它们。环境介质中 PFAS 的存在主要受悬浮颗粒物、微生物群落以及时空因素(如季节和位置)的影响。长链(C≥7)和磺酸基团的线性 PFAS 容易在生物体内累积,对动物源性食品的污染有重要贡献。此外,PFAS 由于其与蛋白质的亲和力,容易在血液和富含蛋白质的组织(如肝脏和肾脏)中累积。PFAS 生物累积的种间差异取决于饮食、血液和组织中蛋白质含量的差异以及特定物种转运蛋白的活性。肉食性鱼类通常比杂食性鱼类表现出更高的 PFAS 累积。家禽通常比哺乳动物更快地代谢 PFAS。动物源性食品加工过程中 PFAS 的暴露也归因于 PFAS 从食品接触材料中的迁移,特别是在高脂肪含量的食品中。来自动物源性食品的 PFAS 暴露对人类健康风险评估表明,经常食用水产品可能对女性和未成年人比成年男性带来更大的风险。本文综述的信息和观点将有助于进一步确定动物源性食品中 PFAS 的毒性和迁移机制,并为食品安全管理提供信息。