| Literature DB >> 29766221 |
Hannes Puntscher1, Mary-Liis Kütt1, Philipp Skrinjar2, Hannes Mikula2, Joachim Podlech3, Johannes Fröhlich2, Doris Marko1, Benedikt Warth4.
Abstract
Mycotoxins produced by Alternaria fungi are ubiquitous food contaminants, but analytical methods for generating comprehensive exposure data are rare. We describe the development of an LC-MS/MS method covering 17 toxins for investigating the natural occurrence of free and modified Alternaria toxins in tomato sauce, sunflower seed oil, and wheat flour. Target analytes included alternariol (AOH), AOH-3-glucoside, AOH-9-glucoside, AOH-3-sulfate, alternariol monomethyl ether (AME), AME-3-glucoside, AME-3-sulfate, altenuene, isoaltenuene, tenuazonic acid (TeA), tentoxin (TEN), altertoxin I and II, alterperylenol, stemphyltoxin III, altenusin, and altenuic acid III. Extensive optimization resulted in a time- and cost-effective sample preparation protocol and a chromatographic baseline separation of included isomers. Overall, adequate limits of detection (0.03-9 ng/g) and quantitation (0.6-18 ng/g), intermediate precision (9-44%), and relative recovery values (75-100%) were achieved. However, stemphyltoxin III, AOH-3-sulfate, AME-3-sulfate, altenusin, and altenuic acid III showed recoveries in wheat flour below 70%, while their performance was stable and reproducible. Our pilot study with samples from the Austrian retail market demonstrated that tomato sauces (n = 12) contained AOH, AME, TeA, and TEN in concentrations up to 20, 4, 322, and 0.6 ng/g, while sunflower seed oil (n = 7) and wheat flour samples (n = 9) were contaminated at comparatively lower levels. Interestingly and of relevance for risk assessment, AOH-9-glucoside, discovered for the first time in naturally contaminated food items, and AME-3-sulfate were found in concentrations similar to their parent toxins. In conclusion, the established multi-analyte method proved to be fit for purpose for generating comprehensive Alternaria toxin occurrence data in different food matrices. Graphical abstract ᅟ.Entities:
Keywords: Alternaria alternata; Food safety; Liquid chromatography; Masked mycotoxins; Perylene quinones; Tandem mass spectrometry
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29766221 PMCID: PMC6021461 DOI: 10.1007/s00216-018-1105-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Bioanal Chem ISSN: 1618-2642 Impact factor: 4.142
Fig. 1Chemical structures of the 17 Alternaria toxins and metabolites included in the developed LC-MS/MS method
Mass spectrometric parameters and analyte specific retention times as optimized by direct infusion experiments and obtained during method validation
| Analytes | RTs | Parent ion | S-Lens | Product ions | Ion ratioa | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quantifier | Qualifier | ||||||||
| [min] | [ | [V] | [ | CE [V] | [ | CE [V] | [%] | ||
| AOH | 6.6 ± 0.3 | 257 | [M-H]- | 70 | 215 | 27 | 147 | 33 | 44 ± 2 |
| AME | 10.0 ± 0.0 | 271 | [M-H]- | 73 | 256 | 23 | 227 | 38 | 17 ± 0.4 |
| ALT | 6.9 ± 0.0 | 291 | [M-H]- | 76 | 229 | 18 | 248 | 20 | 52 ± 13 |
| isoALT | 7.3 ± 0.0 | 291 | [M-H]- | 76 | 203 | 32 | 248 | 20 | 78 ± 4 |
| TeA | 2.1 ± 0.1 | 196 | [M-H]- | 88 | 139 | 22 | 112 | 26 | 51 ± 8 |
| TEN | 8.9 ± 0.0 | 413 | [M-H]- | 100 | 271 | 19 | 141 | 22 | 88 ± 3 |
| AOH-3-Glc | 3.5 ± 0.1 | 419 | [M-H]- | 101 | 256 | 31 | 228 | 42 | 23 ± 1 |
| AOH-9-Glc | 4.8 ± 0.0 | 419 | [M-H]- | 101 | 256 | 31 | 228 | 42 | 25 ± 3 |
| AOH-3-S | 3.7 ± 0.1 | 337 | [M-H]- | 86 | 257 | 22 | 213 | 37 | 14 ± 1 |
| AME-3-Glc | 8.5 ± 0.0 | 433 | [M-H]- | 104 | 270 | 34 | 227 | 44 | 76 ± 5 |
| AME-3-S | 8.0 ± 0.0 | 351 | [M-H]- | 88 | 256 | 34 | 271 | 22 | 60 ± 1 |
| ATX-I | 8.5 ± 0.0 | 351 | [M-H]- | 73 | 315 | 18 | 333 | 14 | 65 ± 4 |
| ATX-II | 9.5 ± 0.0 | 349 | [M-H]- | 88 | 285 | 34 | 332 | 15 | 26 ± 1 |
| ALP | 8.6 ± 0.0 | 349 | [M-H]- | 68 | 303 | 18 | 261 | 28 | 90 ± 3 |
| STTX-III | 9.7 ± 0.0 | 347 | [M-H]- | 71 | 329 | 19 | 301 | 29 | 168 ± 26 |
| ALS | 3.7 ± 0.0 | 289 | [M-H]- | 76 | 245 | 18 | 230 | 22 | 39 ± 2 |
| AA-III | 2.6 ± 0.3 | 321 | [M-H]- | 82 | 233 | 17 | 189 | 22 | 74 ± 1 |
aThe ion ratio (quantifier/qualifier*100) in spiked samples was calculated as an average of the values obtained for the three matrices
Fig. 2Chromatographic separation of the multi-component standard (highest level of the linear range, see Table 2) containing the 17 target analytes
Method validation parameters including spiking levels, limits of detection (LOD) and quantitation (LOQ), linear range, extraction efficiency (RE), intermediate precision (RSDR) and repeatability (RSDr), as well as signal suppression and enhancement (SSE)
| Analytes | Spiking levelsa | LODb, c | LOQd, c | Rangee | REf ± RSDRg | RSDrh | SSEi | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ng/g] | [ng/g] | [ng/g] | [ng/mL] | [%] | [%] | [%] | |||||||
| T | O | F | T | O | F | T | O | F | |||||
| AOH | 5/25/125 | 0.5/0.1/0.6 | 1.0/0.2/1.2 | 0.05–100 | 87 ± 11 | 95 ± 15 | 94 ± 11 | 15/4/3 | 35/11/3 | 29/10/4 | 94 | 102 | 95 |
| AME | 1/5/25 | 0.05/0.03/0.05 | 0.1/0.06/0.1 | 0.01–20 | 86 ± 10 | 84 ± 25 | 99 ± 11 | 9/3/5 | 20/6/5 | 11/6/3 | 81 | 93 | 124 |
| ALT | 30/150/750 | 5.0/5.5/6.0 | 10/11/12 | 0.3–600 | 77 ± 15 | 91 ± 13 | 94 ± 13 | 22/15/4 | 22/15/8 | 14/8/8 | 99 | 109 | 112 |
| isoALT | 30/150/750 | 3.5/3.0/4.0 | 7/8/9 | 0.3–600 | 78 ± 24 | 83 ± 17 | 96 ± 16 | 23/32/4 | 30/8/3 | 21/8/6 | 101 | 105 | 99 |
| TeA | 60/300/1500 | 6/4/7 | 12/8/14 | 0.6–1200 | 77 ± 13 | 75 ± 12 | 91 ± 15 | 22/11/6 | 16/8/5 | 19/10/6 | 90 | 98 | 83 |
| TEN | 1.5/7.5/37.5 | 0.1/0.05/0.5 | 0.2/0.1/1.0 | 0.015–30 | 84 ± 19 | 98 ± 25 | 92 ± 21 | 34/18/8 | 33/8/6 | 19/21/7 | 90 | 111 | 83 |
| AOH-3-Glc | 5/25/125 | 1.0/0.8/1.0 | 2.0/1.6/2.0 | 0.05–100 | 81 ± 20 | 94 ± 16 | 94 ± 16 | 28/14/5 | 32/9/3 | 23/8/3 | 51 | 118 | 68 |
| AOH-9-Glc | 20/100/500 | 4.5/8.0/6.0 | 9/16/12 | 1.2–400 | 85 ± 44 | 83 ± 29 | 86 ± 27 | 19/38/17 | 7/28/16 | 42/39/12 | 79 | 114 | 72 |
| AOH-3-S | 5/25/125 | 1.0/1.8/1.0 | 2.0/3.6/2.0 | 0.05–100 | 82 ± 12 | 91 ± 15 | 55 ± 20 | 19/9/3 | 28/10/5 | 31/15/7 | 84 | 101 | 97 |
| AME-3-Glc | 10/50/250 | 2.0/2.0/1.0 | 4.0/4.0/2.0 | 0.2–200 | 82 ± 34 | 93 ± 25 | 87 ± 38 | 19/23/12 | 40/12/11 | 53/30/5 | 97 | 104 | 103 |
| AME-3-S | 5/25/125 | 0.05/0.05/0.1 | 0.1/0.1/0.2 | 0.05–100 | 84 ± 12 | 100 ± 9 | 59 ± 12 | 9/5/4 | 8/6/3 | 16/4/3 | 107 | 95 | 156 |
| ATX-I | 1/5/25 | 0.2/0.5/0.6 | 0.4/1.0/1.2 | 0.02–20 | 79 ± 22 | 92 ± 20 | 84 ± 29 | 16/21/16 | 48/20/8 | 83/15/11 | 103 | 102 | 89 |
| ATX-II | 5/25/125 | 0.5/1.5/1.2 | 1.0/3.0/2.4 | 0.05–100 | 81 ± 14 | 80 ± 19 | 83 ± 23 | 34/10/10 | 32/8/8 | 29/28/8 | 101 | 102 | 96 |
| ALP | 5/25/125 | 0.8/1.0/1.0 | 1.6/2.0/2.0 | 0.05–100 | 75 ± 21 | 89 ± 24 | 79 ± 28 | 33/13/12 | 28/18/6 | 45/22/4 | 103 | 103 | 97 |
| STTX-III | 5/25/0 | 0.5/3.0/1.0 | 1.0/6.0/2.0 | 0.3–10 | 51 ± 49 | 94 ± 32 | 28 ± 71 | 31/29/– | 22/19/– | 75/19/– | 106 | 113 | 144 |
| ALS | 30/150/750 | 1.8/8.0/9.0 | 3.6/16.0/18.0 | 0.3–600 | 77 ± 9 | 97 ± 20 | 19 ± 29 | 11/5/2 | 23/18/7 | –/13/22 | 144 | 14 | 56 |
| AA-III | 10/50/250 | 1.5/1.5/1.8 | 3.0/3.0/3.6 | 0.1–200 | 83 ± 14 | 88 ± 11 | 64 ± 26 | 10/9/7 | 15/10/4 | 23/16/12 | 104 | 106 | 131 |
aFortification levels were identical for the three matrices (tomato sauce, T; sunflower seed oil, O; wheat flour, F) chosen for low/middle/high concentrations
bLimit of detection
cValues in the following order: tomato sauce/sunflower seed oil/wheat flour matrix
dLimit of quantitation
eConcentration range with linear regression
fRelative recovery (extraction efficiency), calculated as the ratio of analyte concentration quantified using the matrix-matched calibration curve and the known spiking level in the fortified blank samples, averaged over the results of the three spiking levels
gIntermediate precision (interday precision), calculated from the standard deviations of the samples spiked at three levels and measured on three different days of the three consecutive weeks, averaged over the results of the three spiking levels
hRepeatability (intraday precision), calculated from the standard deviations of the samples spiked at three levels measured twice within the same sequence
iSignal suppression and enhancement, calculated as the ratio of calibration curve slopes of the respective matrix and neat solvent
Results of a pilot survey to determine Alternaria toxins in food samples purchased in Austria: tomato sauces (n = 12), sunflower seed oils (n = 7), wheat flours (n = 9). Eight of the 17 analytes included in the method were not detected in any sample and are thus not reported in the table. Abbreviations: n.d. not detected
| Origin | Cultivation | AOH | AME | isoALT | TeA | TEN | AOH-3-Glc | AOH-9-Glc | AOH-3-S | AME-3-S | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tomato sauce | 1 | Italy | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | 42 | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. |
| 2 | Italy | Conventional | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | 117 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | |
| 3 | Italy | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 4 | Morocco | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 5 | Italy | Organic | 20.2 | 4.0 | n.d. | 323 | < LOQ | n.d. | 12.7 | < LOQ | 3.2 | |
| 6 | Italy | Organic | n.d. | < LOQ | < LOQ | 125 | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | <LOQ | |
| 7 | Italy | Organic | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | 114 | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 8 | Spain | Organic | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 9 | Italy | Organic | 1.4 | < LOQ | n.d. | 72 | < LOQ | < LOQ | n.d. | < LOQ | 1.4 | |
| 10 | Italy | Organic | < LOQ | < LOQ | n.d. | 233 | 0.6 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | |
| 11 | Italy | Organic | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 12 | Italy | Organic | < LOQ | < LOQ | n.d. | 65 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | |
| Sunflower seed oil | 1 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| 2 | Austria | Conventional | < LOQ | 2.2 | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 3 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 4 | Germany | Organic | < LOQ | 1.7 | n.d. | 29 | 3.4 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 5 | Austria | Organic | 0.5 | < LOQ | n.d. | 25 | 1.8 | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 6 | Germany | Organic | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 7 | Germany | Organic | n.d. | 0.7 | n.d. | 21 | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| Wheat flour | 1 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
| 2 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 3 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 4 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 5 | Austria | Conventional | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 6 | Austria | Organic | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 7 | Austria | Organic | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 8 | Austria | Organic | < LOQ | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | |
| 9 | Austria | Organic | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. | n.d. |
Fig. 3MRM-chromatograms of the modified Alternaria toxins AOH-3-S (a) and AME-3-S (b) in a naturally contaminated tomato sauce sample (sample #5, AOH-3-S < LOQ, AME-3-S 3.2 ng/g) compared to the respective signals in the tomato sauce matrix-matched standard solution (3 ng/mL). The chromatograms show overlaid quantifier and qualifier transitions for AOH-3-S (m/z 337 → 257 and m/z 337 → 213) and AME-3-S (351 → 256 and 351 → 271), respectively. Signals of higher intensity represent the quantifier transitions