TY - JOUR
T1 - Column switching combined with hydrophilic interaction chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry for the analysis of saxitoxin analogues, and their biosynthetic intermediates in dinoflagellates
AU - Cho, Yuko
AU - Tsuchiya, Shigeki
AU - Yoshioka, Renpei
AU - Omura, Takuo
AU - Konoki, Keiichi
AU - Oshima, Yasukatsu
AU - Yotsu-Yamashita, Mari
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by KAKENHI Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research to Y.C. (no. 15K07569 ) and M.Y.Y. (no. 26292057 ). S.T. was the recipient of a SUNBOR scholarship from the Suntory Institute for Bioorganic Research and S.T. is a research fellow of JSPS (DC2) (no. 15J00480 ). We thank Dr. T. Ishimaru of Tokyo University of Marine Science and Technology, who kindly donated the A. tamarense clonal culture strain Axat-2, and we thank Dr. K. Koike of Hiroshima University for the A. catenella clonal culture strains 120518KureAC and 0807KureAC.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2016/11/25
Y1 - 2016/11/25
N2 - Hydrophilic-interaction chromatography (HILIC) is reportedly useful for the analysis of saxitoxin (STX) analogues, collectively known as paralytic shellfish toxins. Column switching and two-step gradient elution using HILIC combined with mass spectrometry enabled the simultaneous analysis of the 15 primary STX analogues and their biosynthetic intermediates, arginine, Int-A’, and Int-C'2, and the shunt product, Cyclic-C’. Crude extracts of toxin-producing dinoflagellates can be injected without any treatment except filtration. Enrichment of the compounds using this method was highly reproducible with respect to retention times (% RSD was under 1%) and highly sensitive (limits of detection (LODs) were in the range 0.9 (Int-C'2) - 116 (C3) μM) in terms of avoiding matrix effects associated with co-eluting substances. Validation studies demonstrated acceptable performance of this method for specificity, repeatability, linearity and recovery. A comparison of the quantitative results for STX analogues in Alexandrium tamarense using HPLC with post-column fluorescent derivatization and the column-switching HILIC–MS method revealed good agreement. The presence of Int-A’, Int-C'2, and Cyclic-C’ in toxic dinoflagellate species with different toxin profiles was confirmed using this method. Our data support the hypothesis that the early stages of the STX biosynthesis and shunt pathways are the same in dinoflagellates and cyanobacteria.
AB - Hydrophilic-interaction chromatography (HILIC) is reportedly useful for the analysis of saxitoxin (STX) analogues, collectively known as paralytic shellfish toxins. Column switching and two-step gradient elution using HILIC combined with mass spectrometry enabled the simultaneous analysis of the 15 primary STX analogues and their biosynthetic intermediates, arginine, Int-A’, and Int-C'2, and the shunt product, Cyclic-C’. Crude extracts of toxin-producing dinoflagellates can be injected without any treatment except filtration. Enrichment of the compounds using this method was highly reproducible with respect to retention times (% RSD was under 1%) and highly sensitive (limits of detection (LODs) were in the range 0.9 (Int-C'2) - 116 (C3) μM) in terms of avoiding matrix effects associated with co-eluting substances. Validation studies demonstrated acceptable performance of this method for specificity, repeatability, linearity and recovery. A comparison of the quantitative results for STX analogues in Alexandrium tamarense using HPLC with post-column fluorescent derivatization and the column-switching HILIC–MS method revealed good agreement. The presence of Int-A’, Int-C'2, and Cyclic-C’ in toxic dinoflagellate species with different toxin profiles was confirmed using this method. Our data support the hypothesis that the early stages of the STX biosynthesis and shunt pathways are the same in dinoflagellates and cyanobacteria.
KW - Alexandrium catenella
KW - Alexandrium tamarense
KW - Biosynthetic intermediates
KW - Dinoflagellate
KW - HILIC–LC–MS
KW - Paralytic shellfish toxins
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U2 - 10.1016/j.chroma.2016.10.065
DO - 10.1016/j.chroma.2016.10.065
M3 - Article
C2 - 27817832
AN - SCOPUS:84995704468
SN - 0021-9673
VL - 1474
SP - 109
EP - 120
JO - Journal of Chromatography A
JF - Journal of Chromatography A
ER -