Protein Information

ID 1838
Name MMAA
Synonyms HLAT1 3TM; LAT1 3TM; SLC7A5 pseudogene; IMAA; L amino acid transporter1; MMAA; L amino acid transporter1s

Compound Information

ID 860
Name cacodylic acid
CAS dimethylarsinic acid

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
12042019 Herce-Pagliai C, Moreno I, Gonzalez G, Repetto M, Camean AM: Determination of total arsenic, inorganic and organic arsenic species in wine. Food Addit Contam. 2002 Jun;19(6):542-6.
Forty-five wine samples from the south of Spain of different alcoholic strength were analysed for total arsenic and its inorganic [As (III), As (V)] and organic (monomethylarsonic acid [MMAA], dimethylarsinic acid [DMAA]) species. The As levels of the wine samples ranged from 2.1 to 14.6 microg l (-1). The possible effect of the alcoholic fermentation process on the levels of the total arsenic and arsenical species was studied. The average total arsenic levels for the different samples were very similar, without significant differences between all types of wines. In table wines and sherry, the percentages of total inorganic arsenic were 18.6 and 15.6%, with DMAA or MMAA being the predominant species, respectively. In most samples, DMAA was the most abundant species, but the total inorganic aresenic fraction was considerable, representing 25.4% of the total concentration of the element. The estimated daily intakes of total arsenic and total inorganic arsenic for average Spanish consumers were 0.78 and 0.15 microg/person day (-1), respectively. The results suggest that the consumption of these types of wines makes no significant contribution to the total and inorganic arsenic intake for normal drinkers. However, wine consumption contributes a higher arsenic intake than through consumption of beers and sherry brandies.
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