| Literature DB >> 31193371 |
Marco Iammarino1, Annalisa Mentana2, Diego Centonze2, Carmen Palermo2, Michele Mangiacotti1, Antonio Eugenio Chiaravalle1.
Abstract
The use of food dyes in meat is regulated by the current European and non-European legislation, due to several food safety concerns. A reliable method for the quali-quantitative determination of 12 food dyes (Amaranth, Ponceau 4R, Carmine, Ponceau SX, Ponceau 3R, Allura Red AC, Carmoisine, Erythrosine, Sudan I, Sudan II, Sudan III and Sudan IV) in meat products, by high performance liquid chromatography coupled to UV diode array detection is presented. The extraction was accomplished by using acetonitrile, methanol, water, and ammonia, 50:40:9:1 (v/v/v/v) as the solvent and ultrasonic bath. The chromatographic separation was obtained with a C18 RP column eluted by a gradient of acetate buffer/acetonitrile. Good analytical performances characterized this method (Table 1), in terms of selectivity, sensitivity, accuracy and ruggedness. Both method precision (CV% range: 6%-15%) and recovery percentages (range: 86%-105%) resulted in compliance with Decision 2002/657/EC, and the expanded measurement uncertainties, estimated by a bottom-up approach, were in the range 6%-20%. All these results demonstrated that the procedure can be applied successfully for confirmation analyses of commercial meat products. •12 food dyes were determined in meat by new HPLC/UV-DAD method.•The analytical method was fully validated for accurate confirmation analyses.•Method accuracy, sensitivity, selectivity and ruggedness resulted satisfactory.Entities:
Keywords: 12 dyes in meat by HPLC-UV-DAD; Colourings; Food safety; Liquid chromatography
Year: 2019 PMID: 31193371 PMCID: PMC6529403 DOI: 10.1016/j.mex.2019.04.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MethodsX ISSN: 2215-0161
Fig. 1Example of chromatographic separation of 12 dyes (concentration: 5.0 mg L−1).
Fig. 2Absorbance spectrum examples in the range 250–600 nm: Carmine 80 mg kg−1 (A); Sudan IV 20 mg kg−1 (B).
Fig. 3Chromatograms examples: Pork fresh meat sample (A); Pork fresh meat sample spiked with 100 mg kg−1 of 12 dyes (B).
Method performances and validation parameters.
| Dye | Determination coefficient (r2) | LOQ | Mean Recovery % | Mean CV% | Expanded measurement uncertainty |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.999 | 13 | 101 | 6 | 6% | |
| 0.999 | 18 | 103 | 12 | 13% | |
| 0.999 | 15 | 95 | 14 | 14% | |
| 0.998 | 11 | 93 | 15 | 12% | |
| 0.998 | 22 | 100 | 11 | 13% | |
| 0.998 | 22 | 105 | 7 | 18% | |
| 0.997 | 12 | 99 | 10 | 14% | |
| 0.998 | 23 | 89 | 11 | 17% | |
| 0.995 | 16 | 92 | 11 | 14% | |
| 0.992 | 22 | 91 | 9 | 20% | |
| 0.999 | 4 | 86 | 13 | 10% | |
| 0.999 | 19 | 90 | 12 | 10% |
Three fortification levels (6 repetitions each).
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| Resource availability: | Amaranth, Ponceau 4R, Carmine, Ponceau SX, Ponceau 3R, Allura Red AC, Carmoisine, Erythrosine extra bluish, Sudan I, Sudan II, Sudan III, Sudan IV, sodium acetate anhydrous, acetic acid glacial, acetonitrile of HPLC grade, ammonium hydroxide (28–30%), methanol anhydrous, ultrapure water with a specific resistance of 18.2 MΩ-cm. |