Abstract

Cannabidiol (CBD) hemp seed oil is a commercial raw material with antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits that has been formulated into body wash and skin care products. The biggest analytical challenge is how to simultaneously quantify CBD and hemp seed oil as they deposited on the skin surface. CBD is easily separated and quantified from skin surface extracts via a HPLC-mass spectrometry methodology. However, the structural skeleton of triacylglycerides (TAGs) in hemp seed oil is same as those from the skin surface sebum. The strong hydrophobicity with subtle structural difference challenges their separation. In this project, a new reverse phase HPLC-high resolution mass spectrometry methodology was developed with a strong mobile phase normal propanol. The separated hemp seed oil TAGs in the chromatogram were identified and characterized using data-dependent acquisition (DDA) technology. Based on the daughter ion characterization, the separated peak with an ammonium adduct at 890.7226 [M + NH4]+ was confirmed as the parent ion of glycerol with three omega-3 fatty acid chains. This is the first time TAG structure with direct HPLC-tandem mass spectrometry technology has been elucidated without a hydrolysis reaction. The confirmed TAG structure with an ammonium adduct at 890.7226 ± 0.0020 can be used as a representative chemical marker for the hemp seed oil quantification.

Highlights

  • CBD has been comprehensively studied with the conclusion that even high doses of CBD are safe and are well tolerated without causing significant side effects [1,2]

  • High-pressure liquid chromatography-heated electrospray ionization-high resolution mass spectrometry (HPLC–HESI–HRMS) analysis was performed using a Q-ExactiveTM OrbitrapTM mass spectrometry equipped with a HESI-II interface and Vanquish HPLC Systems from Thermo Fisher Scientific (San Jose, CA, USA)

  • HPLC-grade normal propanol, methanol and ethanol were purchased from SigmaAldrich

Read more

Summary

Introduction

CBD has been comprehensively studied with the conclusion that even high doses of CBD are safe and are well tolerated without causing significant side effects [1,2]. Its antioxidation function is able to help counteract oxidative cell damage generated by free radicals, decreasing visible signs of skin aging [5]. Those benefits have made CBD become an important ingredient in the cosmetic industry in recent years [6,7]. Both current European legislation and US FDA regulation do not prohibit the use of synthetically obtained CBD in cosmetic products

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call