Ochratoxin A is known to occur in commodities such as cereals, coffee, dried fruit, and red wine.
It is possibly a human carcinogen and is of special interest as it can be accumulated in the meat of animals.
Exposure to ochratoxins through diet can cause acute toxicity in mammalian kidneys.
Exposure to ochratoxin A has been associated with Balkan endemic nephropathy, a kidney disease with high mortality in people living near tributaries of the Danube River in Eastern Europe.
[1] It has been suggested that carriers of alleles associated with phenylketonuria may have been protected from spontaneous abortion caused by ochratoxin exposure, providing a heterozygous advantage for the alleles despite the possibility of severe intellectual disability in the more rare instance of inheritance from both parents.