Abstract:
Aflatoxins (AF) are toxic secondary metabolites produced by aspergillus fungi, pose significant
health risks due to their contamination in food products, particularly maize and peanuts. This
study investigates the interactions of the most toxic variant, AFB1 along with its reduced form
AFB2 and hydroxylated metabolite AFM1 with metal ions (Zn²⁺ and Fe²⁺) using the
DFT/B3LYP/6-31G+(d,p) computational method implemented in Gaussian 16W. The
Conductor-like Polarizable Continuum Model (CPCM) with water as the solvent was
employed to analyze solvation effects. Before complexation with metal ions, all the variant of
aflatoxins (B1, B2, G1, G2, M1 and M2) were optimized using the same computational method.
It is well known than metal ions (Zn2+ and Fe2+) influence aflatoxin stability, reactivity, and
toxicity. Geometrical parameters, thermodynamic properties, spectral analysis and NBO
charge distributions were analyzed to understand metal coordination effects. Several
complexes of metal ion (Zn2+ and Fe2+) with aflatoxin (B1, B2 and M1) are optimized. The
most stable structure for each complexation is assigned as structure A. The aflatoxin
complexes with Zn²⁺ and Fe²⁺ exhibited negative ∆G and ∆H values, confirming spontaneous
complexation and an exothermic process. The change in entropy, ∆S for Zn2+-aflatoxin
complexes show lower value compared to Fe2+-aflatoxin complexes which reflects Zn2+
aflatoxin complexes are thermodynamically favored. NBO analysis revealed strong donor
acceptor interactions with Zn2+-aflatoxin complexes demonstrating greater electronic stability
than Fe2+-aflatoxin complexes. The absorption maxima, λmax for the most stable complexes of
Zn2+-AFB1 and Fe2+-AFB1 are 318.51 nm and 324.39 nm respectively. The nature of transition
for Zn2+-AFB1 complexes are n→π* and π →π* along with ligand to metal charge transfer
(LMCT) while for Fe2+-AFB1 complexes are n→π*, π →π*, d→d along with metal-to-ligand
charge transfer (MLCT). IR spectral analysis further supported the strong complex formation
with Zn²⁺ which coordination significantly weakening C=O bonds, whereas Fe²⁺ interactions
cause shifting of frequency depending on the binding site. This computational study explores
metal- aflatoxin interactions, highlighting the structural and thermodynamic effects of Zn²⁺ and
Fe²⁺ coordination. Zn²⁺ forms stronger, more stable complexes, significantly altering molecular
geometry and electron distribution compared to the Fe2+-aflatoxin. These findings contribute
to understanding aflatoxin reactivity and potential metal-based detoxification strategies, paving
the way for further experimental validation.