
Toxic effects of melamine and its impact on food safety
Tech Blog Toxic effects of melamine and its impact on food safety Melamine powder, a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic chemical raw material, has an extremely high nitrogen
In 2007, a large-scale pet poisoning incident occurred overseas, causing thousands of cats and dogs to die unexpectedly. Subsequent inspections found that melamine and its analogues were illegally added to imported plant protein raw materials for animal feed. Since the Kjeldahl method only measures total nitrogen, these high-nitrogen chemicals were used to fraudulently inflate the apparent protein content of feed products.
Melamine waste residue commonly contains four main components: melamine, cyanuric acid, dicyandiamide and cyanamide. To clarify the actual health risks of these substances, researchers conducted systematic cell toxicity tests and acute toxicity tests. This article breaks down the test methods, key data, toxicity rankings and safety assessments of the four compounds, providing reliable references for feed safety, chemical application and risk assessment.
All four substances were dissolved in culture medium and glycerol as a solubilizer. Melamine, cyanuric acid and dicyandiamide were prepared into 5 mg/mL stock solutions, while cyanamide was prepared into a 2 mg/mL solution. All solutions were diluted 3 times in series under sterile conditions.
BHK cells were seeded into 96-well plates and incubated to allow cell attachment. Different concentrations of sample solutions were added to each well, with 5 parallel groups for every dilution. After 20 hours of incubation, MTT reagent was added, followed by DMSO to dissolve cell crystals. The absorbance value at 570 nm was measured with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) reader.
Cell survival rate was calculated using the standard formula, and the half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) — a key index of cell toxicity — was determined using professional software. Lower IC50 values mean stronger cell toxicity.
Melamine, cyanuric acid and dicyandiamide belong to this category. Their LD50 values are all over 5000 mg/kg, meaning a very high oral dose is required to cause acute poisoning in animals.
It is noteworthy that long-term or excessive intake of melamine can lead to crystal deposition in the urinary system, which may damage the kidneys and ureters over time, even though it does not cause acute death easily.

Tech Blog Toxic effects of melamine and its impact on food safety Melamine powder, a nitrogen-containing heterocyclic chemical raw material, has an extremely high nitrogen

Tech Blog Application of Melamine in Fire Protection Engineering Melamine powder is an outstanding nitrogen-based flame retardant with irreplaceable merits in fire protection engineering. With

Tech Blog Melamine Detection by HPLC Adulteration with melamine powder in food and dairy products has become a major food safety hazard worldwide. The traditional

JINGJIANG MELAMINE POWDER
© JINJIANG MELAMINE