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1.
J Mass Spectrom ; 59(6): e5037, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38752484

ABSTRACT

Bacillus cereus is responsible for foodborne outbreaks worldwide. Among the produced toxins, cereulide induces nausea and vomiting after 30 min to 6 h following the consumption of contaminated foods. Cereulide, a cyclodepsipeptide, is an ionophore selective to K+ in solution. In electrospray, the selectivity is reduced as [M + Li]+; [M + Na]+ and [M + NH4]+ can also be detected without adding corresponding salts. Two forms are possible for alkali-cationized ions: charge-solvated (CS) that exclusively dissociates by releasing a bare alkali ion and protonated salt (PS), yielding alkali product ions by covalent bond cleavages (CBC) promoted by mobile proton. Based on a modified peptide cleavage nomenclature, the PS product ion series (b, a, [b + H2O] and [b + CnH2nO] [n = 4, 5]) are produced by Na+/Li+/K+-cationized cereulide species that specifically open at ester linkages followed by proton mobilization promoting competitive ester CBC as evidenced under resonant collision activation. What is more, unlike the sodiated or lithiated cereulide, which regenerates little or no alkali cation, the potassiated forms lead to an abundant K+ regeneration. This occurs by splitting of (i) the potassiated CS forms with an appearance threshold close to that of the PS first fragment ion generation and (ii) eight to four potassiated residue product ions from the PS forms. Since from Na+/Li+-cationized cereulide, (i) the negligible Na+/Li+ regeneration results in a higher sensibility than that of potassiated forms that abundantly releasing K+, and (ii) a better sequence recovering, the use of Na+ (or Li+) should be more pertinent to sequence isocereulides and other cyclodepsipeptides.


Subject(s)
Cations , Depsipeptides , Protons , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Depsipeptides/chemistry , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization/methods , Cations/chemistry , Alkalies/chemistry , Bacillus cereus/chemistry , Salts/chemistry
2.
Chemosphere ; 354: 141755, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38521101

ABSTRACT

Chlordecone is an organochlorine pesticide used from 1972 to 1993 in the French West Indies. Its extensive use and high persistence in soils induced massive contamination of the environment and of the food chain, especially in cattle through contaminated soil ingestion. To ensure suitability for consumption of bovine meat, monitoring plans are set up based on perirenal fat concentrations after slaughtering. In the present study, we have investigated an in-vivo monitoring approach by measuring chlordecone levels in serum samples. For this purpose, a sensitive high-performance liquid-chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS) method following a QuEChERS extraction method was successfully optimized and validated, reaching a limit of quantification of 0.05 ng g-1 fresh weight. This method was applied to 121 serum samples collected from bovines originating from contaminated areas of Martinique and Guadeloupe. Chlordecone was detected in 88% of the samples, and quantified in 77% of the samples, with concentrations ranging from 0.05 to 22 ng g-1. Perirenal fat, liver, and muscle were also sampled on the same animals and the measured concentrations of chlordecone were statistically correlated to the levels determined in serum. Mean concentration ratios of 6.5 for fat/serum, 27.5 for liver/serum, and 3.3 for muscle/serum were calculated, meaning that chlordecone was not only distribute in fat (as expected), muscle and liver, but also in serum. Good correlations were found to allow prediction of chlordecone concentrations in muscle based on concentrations measured in serum. This study opens the door to possible pre-control of bovines before slaughter. In cases of probable non-compliance with maximum residue levels (MRLs), farm management could proceed to allow for depuration under controlled conditions. This would have a strong impact on both economic and food safety management measures.


Subject(s)
Chlordecone , Insecticides , Soil Pollutants , Animals , Cattle , Chlordecone/analysis , Insecticides/analysis , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry , Liver/chemistry , Muscles/chemistry , Soil Pollutants/analysis
3.
Environ Int ; 186: 108585, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38521044

ABSTRACT

The chemical burden on the environment and human population is increasing. Consequently, regulatory risk assessment must keep pace to manage, reduce, and prevent adverse impacts on human and environmental health associated with hazardous chemicals. Surveillance of chemicals of known, emerging, or potential future concern, entering the environment-food-human continuum is needed to document the reality of risks posed by chemicals on ecosystem and human health from a one health perspective, feed into early warning systems and support public policies for exposure mitigation provisions and safe and sustainable by design strategies. The use of less-conventional sampling strategies and integration of full-scan, high-resolution mass spectrometry and effect-directed analysis in environmental and human monitoring programmes have the potential to enhance the screening and identification of a wider range of chemicals of known, emerging or potential future concern. Here, we outline the key needs and recommendations identified within the European Partnership for Assessment of Risks from Chemicals (PARC) project for leveraging these innovative methodologies to support the development of next-generation chemical risk assessment.


Subject(s)
Environmental Exposure , Environmental Monitoring , Humans , Environmental Exposure/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Environmental Monitoring/standards , Environmental Pollutants/analysis , Hazardous Substances/analysis , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Risk Assessment/methods
4.
Sci Total Environ ; 788: 147833, 2021 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34034181

ABSTRACT

Chlordecone (CLD) is an organochlorine pesticide widely used from the 1970s to the 1990s in the French West Indies that induced long-term pollution of the ecosystem. Due to involuntary soil ingestion, some species bred in open-air areas can be contaminated. As CLD is distributed in various tissues depending on the breeding species, this study focuses on the distribution of CLD in bovines. For this purpose, three tissues, i.e. fat, muscle, and liver, from 200 bovines originating from Martinique and Guadeloupe were sampled in 2016 to determine their endemic contamination levels. Analyses were performed with the official method for veterinary controls, isotopic dilution liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, which has been fully validated and which reaches a limit of quantification of 3 µg.kg-1 fresh weight (fw). Irrespective of the matrices, CLD was detected in 68% of samples (404 samples above the LOD) and quantified in 59% of samples (332 samples above the LOQ). Regarding contamination levels, the liver had a broader range of concentrations (LOQ up to 420.6 µg.kg-1 fw) than fat (LOQ up to 124.6 µg.kg-1 fw) and muscle (LOQ up to 67.6 µg.kg-1 fw). This confirms the atypical behaviour of CLD compared to other persistent organochlorine pollutants. Statistical processing demonstrated a correlation between CLD concentrations among the three studied tissues. The CLD concentration ratios were 0.54 for muscle/fat, 3.75 for liver/fat, and 0.14 for muscle/liver.


Subject(s)
Chlordecone , Insecticides , Soil Pollutants , Animals , Cattle , Chlordecone/analysis , Chromatography, Liquid , Ecosystem , Insecticides/analysis , Martinique , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , West Indies
5.
Environ Int ; 144: 106077, 2020 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32866735

ABSTRACT

Chlordecone (CLD) is a toxic organochlorine pesticide frequently used in the French West Indies until 1993, resulting in a contamination of soil and food. This study assessed the behaviour of CLD residues and CLD processing factors (PFs) during four home cooking processes: cooking in a conventional oven ("oven"), frying ("pan"), cooking in a microwave oven ("microwave") and grilling ("grill"). These four processes were applied to six types of naturally contaminated beef (kidney, liver, rib, chuck, top-sirloin and sirloin). Targeted analyses with isotopic dilution were carried out by ID-HPLC-MS/MS to determine CLD concentrations before and after each cooking process and the corresponding processing factors. HPLC-HRMS/MS was used to find potential organochlorine degradation by-products and/or CLD metabolites present in samples by target, suspect and non-target screening. Cooking processes and especially microwave cooking led to a significant decrease in the CLD contained in beef (2% < PF < 17%). Traces of 5b-hydro-CLD and of another mono-hydro-CLD were found in the uncooked liver but no CLD degradation by-product was observed in the cooked liver.


Subject(s)
Chlordecone , Soil Pollutants , Animals , Cattle , Chlordecone/analysis , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Cooking , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , West Indies
6.
Toxins (Basel) ; 12(9)2020 09 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32947992

ABSTRACT

In 2015, tetrodotoxins (TTXs) were considered a potential threat in Europe since several studies had shown the presence of these toxins in European bivalve molluscs. In this study, we investigated the occurrence of TTXs in 127 bivalve samples (mussels and oysters) and in 66 gastropod samples (whelks) collected all along the French mainland coasts in 2017 and 2018. Analyses were carried out after optimization and in-house validation of a performing hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography associated with tandem mass spectrometry (HILIC-MS/MS) method. The concentration set by European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) not expected to result in adverse effects (44 µg TTX equivalent/kg) was never exceeded, but TTX was detected in three mussel samples and one whelk sample (1.7-11.2 µg/kg). The tissue distribution of TTX in this whelk sample showed higher concentrations in the digestive gland, stomach and gonads (7.4 µg TTX/kg) than in the rest of the whelk tissues (below the limit of detection of 1.7 µg TTX/kg). This is the first study to report the detection of TTX in French molluscs.


Subject(s)
Bivalvia/metabolism , Food Contamination , Gastropoda/metabolism , Seafood , Tetrodotoxin/analysis , Animals , Biological Monitoring , Chromatography, Liquid , Ostreidae/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results , Tandem Mass Spectrometry , Tissue Distribution
7.
Toxins (Basel) ; 10(9)2018 09 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30223487

ABSTRACT

When considering the geographical expansion of marine toxins, the emergence of new toxins and the associated risk for human health, there is urgent need for versatile and efficient analytical methods that are able to detect a range, as wide as possible, of known or emerging toxins. Current detection methods for marine toxins rely on a priori defined target lists of toxins and are generally inappropriate for the detection and identification of emerging compounds. The authors describe the implementation of a recent approach for the non-targeted analysis of marine toxins in shellfish with a focus on a comprehensive workflow for the acquisition and treatment of the data generated after liquid chromatography coupled with high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) analysis. First, the study was carried out in targeted mode to assess the performance of the method for known toxins with an extended range of polarities, including lipophilic toxins (okadaic acid, dinophysistoxins, azaspiracids, pectenotoxins, yessotoxins, cyclic imines, brevetoxins) and domoic acid. The targeted method, assessed for 14 toxins, shows good performance both in mussel and oyster extracts. The non-target potential of the method was then challenged via suspects and without a priori screening by blind analyzing mussel and oyster samples spiked with marine toxins. The data processing was optimized and successfully identified the toxins that were spiked in the blind samples.


Subject(s)
Bivalvia/chemistry , Marine Toxins/analysis , Ostreidae/chemistry , Water Pollutants/analysis , Animals , Chromatography, Liquid , Mass Spectrometry/methods
8.
J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci ; 1093-1094: 66-76, 2018 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29990715

ABSTRACT

Chlordecone (CLD) is a Persistent Organic Pollutant used between 1972 until 1993 in the French West Indies (FWI). Due to its persistence and extensive application, a quarter of the total local agricultural acreage is still moderate to heavily polluted. In consequence, livestock may be contaminated at various levels. This is a major public health concern, particularly for local consumers. In order to better understand the fate of CLD in livestock organisms, in vivo studies are required. There is no information available about its metabolism and elimination in ruminants, common livestock in the FWI. To be able to monitor the fate of chlordecone and its metabolites in livestock and to assess if the compounds could be released in the environment, urinary and fecal samples were logically targeted. In order to reach this goal, robust and validated analytical methods are required. For this purpose, Quick, Easy, Cheap, Effective, Rugged, and Safe (QuEChERS) extraction methods were validated to analyze CLD and its metabolites in the urine and feces. The analysis was carried using liquid phase chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry and validated according to French standard NF V03-110 and SANTE guidelines. Matrix effect, Accuracy, within-laboratory repeatability, specificity, Q/q relative ion intensities and uncertainty were reported. Recoveries between 70% and 120% were obtained from urine and feces. The limits of quantification (LOQ) in urine samples were 0.1 µg CLD L-1, 0.1 µg total CLD (CLD and its conjugates)·L-1, 1.3 µg CLDOH L-1 and 2.4 µg total CLD (chlordecol and its conjugates) L-1 of urine. LOQ in fresh feces were 3.2 µg CLD kg-1 and 5.8 µg CLDOH kg-1. Contaminated urinary and fecal samples from ewes were analyzed to confirm the relevance of the methods. In urine, CLD and conjugated CLDOH could be quantified whereas only free CLD and free CLDOH were found in feces. These methods are essential for future toxicokinetic studies and also to estimate the environmental contamination.


Subject(s)
Chlordecone/analysis , Feces/chemistry , Pesticide Residues/analysis , Sheep/metabolism , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Animals , Chlordecone/chemistry , Chlordecone/metabolism , Chromatography, Liquid , Female , Linear Models , Pesticide Residues/chemistry , Pesticide Residues/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Soil Pollutants/chemistry , Soil Pollutants/metabolism , Tandem Mass Spectrometry
9.
Food Chem ; 252: 147-153, 2018 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29478525

ABSTRACT

A QuEChERS extraction method followed by HPLC-MS/MS analysis was developed to simultaneously analyze chlordecone and its metabolite chlordecol in animal livers. The overall method was validated with accuracy profiles according to the French Standard NF V03-110 and European Union guidelines. The validation was performed on bovine, ovine and porcine liver samples. Linearity, matrix effect, accuracy, within-laboratory repeatability, specificity, LOQ, Q/q relative ion intensities, and uncertainty were reported. Recoveries were between 70% and 120%. LOQs of 1.36 µg chlordecone kg-1 and 2.50 µg chlordecol kg-1 of fresh liver were found. Twelve contaminated livers of bovine, ovine and porcine origin from the French West Indies or samples from in vivo studies were analyzed. In these liver samples from contaminated animals, chlordecone was quantified at concentrations higher than the maximum residue limit and chlordecol in very low amounts in all the samples. In addition, these results confirm that chlordecone can be metabolized in ruminant species.


Subject(s)
Chemical Fractionation/methods , Chlordecone/analysis , Chlordecone/isolation & purification , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Liver/chemistry , Safety , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods , Animals , Cattle , Chlordecone/chemistry , Costs and Cost Analysis , Isotopes/chemistry , Sheep , Swine
10.
J Chromatogr A ; 1270: 318-23, 2012 Dec 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23200024

ABSTRACT

Car lubricant additives are added to mineral or synthetic base stocks to improve viscosity and resistance to oxidation of the lubricant and to limit wear of engines. In previous papers related to this purpose, it was demonstrated that SFC allows the elution of common low molecular weight additives. Since their total resolution could not be achieved owing to the limited peak capacity of packed columns, the hyphenation of selective and informative detectors, atomic emission and mass spectrometry, were also carried out for identification. This paper describes the final implementation of a packed column SFC/FID-UV-AED-FTIR-MS system to contribute to the characterisation of both the base stock, mineral or semi-synthetic, and the low molecular weight additives. SFC/FID-UV-FTIR ensures the easy confirmation of the presence of esters in the base stock. Reference additives are used to demonstrate the performances of the multi hyphenated system prior to its implementation for their identification in packages and in formulated lubricants. Identification and partial structure elucidation of additives and families of additives in package and formulated car lubricants are presented: using combined information obtained from AED traces and FTIR chemigrams, chemical families of additives can be deduced. Then, the mass spectra can be interpreted in the elution zone of interest in order to go further in the determination of the additive molecular structure. The hypernated SFC system was also employed to follow the ageing of car lubricants.


Subject(s)
Automobiles , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid/methods , Lubricants/analysis , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid/instrumentation , Lubricants/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared
11.
J Chromatogr A ; 1216(5): 837-44, 2009 Jan 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19111312

ABSTRACT

Car lubricant additives are added to mineral or synthetic base stocks to improve viscosity and resistance to oxidation of the lubricant and to limit wear of engines. As they belong to various chemical classes and are added to a very complex medium, the base stock, their detailed chromatographic analysis is very difficult and time consuming. In a previous paper, it was demonstrated that supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) allows the elution of common low-molecular-weight additives. Since their total resolution could not be achieved owing to the limited peak capacity of packed columns, the hyphenation of selective and informative detection methods such as atomic emission detection (AED) was required. Further to results obtained in SFC-AED, this work describes the hyphenation of SFC to atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation ion trap mass spectrometry (MS). SFC-MS hyphenation is detailed: temperature, flow rates of gas and mobile phase introduced in the source, position of the restrictor, ionisation additives and conditions of autotune are studied. Car lubricant monitoring requires negative and positive ionisation modes with or without the addition of ionisation auxiliary solvent according to the nature of additives. Moreover, when sensitivity is of major concern for a selected additive, the autotuning routine of the MS has to be performed in conditions as close as possible to analytical conditions, i.e. under subcritical conditions. Unambiguous identification and structure elucidation of several additives in formulated car lubricants are also presented.


Subject(s)
Atmospheric Pressure , Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid/methods , Lubricants/analysis , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Automobiles , Carbon Dioxide/chemistry , Equipment Design , Reproducibility of Results , Temperature
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