Miniaturized Analytical Strategy Based on μ-SPEed for Monitoring the Occurrence of Pyrrolizidine and Tropane Alkaloids in Honey.
Natalia CasadoSonia Morante-ZarceroIsabel SierraPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2023)
Currently, the analysis of trace-level contaminants in food must be addressed following green analytical chemistry principles and with a commitment to the sustainable development goals. Accordingly, a sustainable and ecofriendly microextraction procedure based on μ-SPEed followed by ultrahigh liquid chromatography coupled to ion-trap tandem mass spectrometry analysis was developed to determine the occurrence of pyrrolizidine and tropane alkaloids in honey samples. The μ-SPEed procedure took approximately 3 min per sample, using only 100 μL of organic solvent and 300 μL of diluted sample. The method was properly validated (overall recoveries 72-100% and precision RSD values ≤15%), and its greenness was scored at 0.61 out of 1. The method was applied to different honey samples, showing overall contamination levels from 32 to 177 μg/kg of these alkaloids. Atropine was found in all the samples, whereas retrorsine N -oxide, lasiocarpine, echimidine, and echimidine N -oxide were the main pyrrolizidine alkaloids in the samples analyzed.
Keyphrases
- liquid chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- mass spectrometry
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- high performance liquid chromatography
- simultaneous determination
- gas chromatography
- risk assessment
- solid phase extraction
- minimally invasive
- high resolution
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- drinking water
- molecularly imprinted
- ms ms
- heavy metals
- public health
- water soluble