Abstract

An LC-MS/MS method has been developed for the sensitive and selective determination of 35 mycotoxins (biomarkers of exposure) in pig urine samples. Sample preparation includes creatinine adjustment (with the developed LC-UV method) with enzymatic hydrolysis of pig urine samples followed by liquid-liquid (LLE) extraction. The LLE protocol, as well as enzymatic hydrolysis for indirect mycotoxin glucuronides determination, was optimized in this study. Additionally, two other sample preparation protocols were compared with the developed LLE method: immunoaffinity columns and solid-phase extraction cartridges (Oasis HLB). The detection and quantification of the biomarkers were performed using triple quadrupole mass spectrometry.The method was validated with regard to the guidelines specified by the EMEA (European Medicines Agency). The extraction recoveries were higher than 60% for 77% of the analytes studied, with the intra- and inter-day relative standard deviation being lower than 20% for most of the compounds at four different concentration levels. The limits of quantification ranged from 0.1 ng/mL for zearalenone and sterigmatocystin to 8 ng/mL for nivalenol. To the best knowledge of the authors, the matrix effect was evaluated for the first time in this study for six different urine samples, and the coefficient of variation was found to be lower than 15% for most analytes studied. Finally, the developed method was applied to analyse 56 pig urine samples. Deoxynivalenol (1–20 ng/mL), zearalenone (0.1–1.5 ng/mL) and ochratoxin A (1.5–15 ng/mL) were the main analytes detected in these samples. Moreover, the co-occurrence of alternariol monomethyl ether and alternariol in pig urine is reported herein for the first time.

Highlights

  • Animal feed is commonly contaminated with several mycotoxins

  • It became obvious that both transitions of DON in negative ionization mode (355/265 and 355/295) had severe matrix interferences and abundant background noise in both the blank and spiked urine samples which did not allow for adequate LOD values to be obtained

  • The ion source temperature was an important parameter to optimize for DON, ZEN, NIV, FUS-X, ENNs and BEA

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Summary

Introduction

Animal feed is commonly contaminated with several mycotoxins. The main sources of toxins are cereals; maize in particular is frequently contaminated with Fusarium toxins like deoxynivalenol (DON) and zearalenone (ZEN) (Pereira et al 2019). Monitoring the exposure of animals to mycotoxins may include an analysis of toxin contamination in the diet and the analysis of toxins in biological matrices with the use of biomarkers of exposure (the parent compounds themselves and their metabolites or reaction products, the levels of which can be measured either in the body or after extraction (Vidal et al 2018)), as a helpful and additional tool used to assess the exposure of the pig to mycotoxins. The validated method was applied to the analysis of biomarkers of mycotoxins in 56 pig spot urine samples

Material and methods
Method validation
Results and discussion
Full Text
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