Thursday, January 22, 2026
Economy & Markets
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What is Cereulide? The Toxin in Recalled Nestlé Formula

C&EN
January 20, 20262 days ago
What is the toxin in Nestlé’s recalled infant formula?

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Nestlé recalled infant formula in over 50 countries due to contamination by the toxin cereulide. This toxin, produced by bacteria, is highly stable and resistant to degradation. Nestlé links the contamination to a quality issue with an added ingredient, arachidonic acid (ARA), sourced from an unnamed supplier. No illnesses have been confirmed in relation to the recalled products.

Nestlé announced a recall of some batches of baby formula during the week of Jan. 5, and on Jan. 13 the firm’s CEO, Philipp Navratil, posted a video apology on Nestlé’s website. The recall is due to contamination by the cyclic depsipeptide cereulide and is related to the formula ingredient arachidonic acid (ARA), though the connection between the two substances is not clear. Here we try to answer some of your questions about the chemicals involved in this recall. What is Nestlé doing and why? Nestlé has issued an infant formula product advisory after detecting cereulide in some baby formula. Formula is being recalled in more than 50 countries around the world. In the UK, for example, batches of Nestlé’s SMA brand formula are being pulled from shelves. What is cereulide? Cereulide is a toxin made by Bacillus cereus bacteria. Cereulide’s cyclic dodecadepsipeptide structure has a high affinity for potassium ions. The toxin inserts itself into cell membranes, where it transports potassium ions, thereby disrupting mitochondria and damaging cells. There is some evidence that the toxin also binds to 5-HT3 serotonin receptors in the gut and causes nausea and vomiting. Nestlé reports that no illnesses have been confirmed in connection with its products. “What makes it so dangerous is the toxin itself is so stable and resistant to degradation,” says T. Martin Schmeing, a biochemistry professor at McGill University who has studied the enzymes that make cereulide. “So if you have contaminated material, you could cook it, microwave it, boil it; you could use harsh cleaning products that use extreme pH to break things down; or you can use enzyme treatment like proteases to break things down, and that could kill all the bacteria that makes cereulide. But the actual cereulide will still be there. It will not be destroyed of any of these treatments.” Nestlé connects the presence of cereulide in baby formula to a quality problem with ARA, an ingredient added to many formulas, from an unnamed supplier. What is ARA? Along with docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), ARA is one of the two main long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids that are added to baby formula to make it more like human breast milk. DHA can be extracted from fish oil or produced by algae fermentation. ARA, in contrast, is commercially made only by fermentation. One of the pioneers in the business, the Dutch firm DSM, now DSM-Firmenich, developed a method in the 1990s for fermenting ARA from the filamentous fungus Mortierella alpina. DSM-Firmenich has told news organizations that its products are not affected by the recall. The stock price of another ARA supplier, the Chinese firm Cabio Biotech, has fallen since the recall announcement. Cabio says on its website that it is the first Chinese company to commercialize ARA. It also uses M. alpina. How did cereulide contaminate ARA? B. cereus contamination is common, so it’s likely that the bacteria tainted the ARA oil at some stage during its processing.

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    Nestlé Formula Toxin: Cereulide Explained