This application note describes an extraction method from chicken and a LC-MS/MS method for the quantification and confirmation of CAP in chicken.
Chloramphenicol (CAP), shown in Figure 1, is an inexpensive, broad spectrum antibiotic, which has very effective antibacterial properties. It was isolated from the soil bacterium Streptomyces venezuelae in 1947 but, unlike many antibiotics derived from bacteria and fungi, it is readily synthesised and inexpensive to produce. Due to CAP’s low cost and high availability, the antibiotic has been used to treat food-producing animals, which is of some concern since it is reportedly a cause of the potentially fatal blood condition idiosyncratic aplastic anemia. Additionally, hypersensitivity to the drug affects around one in thirty thousand people, regardless of the dosage.1 Due to the various adverse effects associated with the use of CAP in the treatment of infections, its use in humans is restricted to cases where safer antibiotics have proved ineffective and the benefits of the drug outweigh the risks associated with toxicity.
In the EU, no Maximum Residue Limit (MRL) has been set for CAP in animal derived food and it is listed in Annex IV of EU Council regulation 2377/90/EEC. It has been banned from use in food-producing animals since 1994. EU Decision 2003/181/EC, sets a Minimum Required Performance Limit (MRPL) of 0.3 ppb for CAP.
There is a requirement to achieve the lowest possible levels of quantification and confirmation. Since its ban in 1994, CAP has been reported to be found in food like shrimp, honey, and chicken.2,3
This paper describes an extraction from chicken and a LC-MS/MS method for the quantification and confirmation of CAP in chicken.
System: |
Waters ACQUITY UPLC |
Mobile phase A: |
Water |
Mobile phase B: |
Methanol |
Column: |
ACQUITY BEH C18 2.1 x 50 mm, 1.7 μm |
Column temp: |
55 °C |
Flow rate: |
0.5 mL/min |
Injection volume: |
10 μL |
Gradient: |
|
Time 0.00 min: |
95% A 5% B |
Time 0.40 min: |
95% A 5% B |
Time 1.00 min: |
0% A 100% B |
Time 1.50 min: |
0% A 100% B |
Time 1.55 min: |
95% A 5% B |
Time 3.00 min: |
95% A 5% B |
System: Waters Micromass Quattro Premier XE in electrospray mode with negative polarity
MRM transitions along with the cone voltages and collision energies are listed in Table 1. For CAP, two transitions were chosen, one for quantification (bold type) and another as confirmation (regular type), in accordance with European guidelines.4 The transitions were optimized with argon as the collision gas. D5-CAP was used as the internal standard for the method. Since the calibration standards were prepared in mobile phase solvents, a comparison of peak areas between calibration and recovery experiments allowed an estimation of matrix suppression effects to be made.
Data were acquired with Waters MassLynx Software and processed with Waters TargetLynx Application Manager.
The absolute sensitivity for the ACQUITY UPLC/Quattro Premier XE is shown in Figure 2, with a 0.01 pg/μL standard giving a signal-to-noise ratio of approximately 45:1.
The three MRM transitions used for CAP and D5-CAP are shown in Figure 3 at a concentration of 0.3 μg/kg. For the data acquired using the ACQUITY UPLC/Quattro Premier XE, calibration was performed using solvent standards and matrix-spiked chicken samples were analyzed.
Figures 4 and 5 illustrate the typical linearity and repeatability that is obtained by using the extraction method discussed with the ACQUITY UPLC/Quattro Premier XE.
A rapid method for the determination and quantification of chloramphenicol in chicken has been described. The Waters ACQUITY UPLC/Quattro Premier XE provides a sensitive, selective, and reproducible analysis method. The limits of determination achieved are below that required by legislation for any country in the European Union.
720001483, August 2007