An extensive study of the metabolism of the type A trichothecene mycotoxins HT-2 toxin and T-2 toxin in barley using liquid chromatography coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) is reported. A recently developed untargeted approach based on stable isotopic labelling, LC-Orbitrap-MS analysis with fast polarity switching and data processing by MetExtract software was combined with targeted LC-Q-TOF-MS(/MS) analysis for metabolite structure elucidation and quantification. In total, 9 HT-2 toxin and 13 T-2 toxin metabolites plus tentative isomers were detected, which were successfully annotated by calculation of elemental formulas and further LC-HRMS/MS measurements as well as partly identified with authentic standards. As a result, glucosylated forms of the toxins, malonylglucosides, and acetyl and feruloyl conjugates were elucidated. Additionally, time courses of metabolite formation and mass balances were established. For absolute quantification of those compounds for which standards were available, the method was validated by determining apparent recovery, signal suppression, or enhancement and extraction recovery. Most importantly, T-2 toxin was rapidly metabolised to HT-2 toxin and for both parent toxins HT-2 toxin-3-O-β-glucoside was identified (confirmed by authentic standard) as the main metabolite, which reached its maximum already 1 day after toxin treatment.Graphical AbstractIsotope-assisted untargeted screening of HT-2 toxin and T-2 toxin metabolites in barleyElectronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00216-015-8975-9) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Zearalenone (ZON) is a potent estrogenic mycotoxin produced by several Fusarium species most frequently on maize and therefore can be found in food and animal feed. Since animal production performance is negatively affected by the presence of ZON, its detoxification in contaminated plant material or by-products of bioethanol production would be advantageous. Microbial biotransformation into nontoxic metabolites is one promising approach. In this study the main transformation product of ZON formed by the yeast Trichosporon mycotoxinivorans was identified and characterized by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) and LC-diode array detector (DAD) analysis. The metabolite, named ZOM-1, was purified, and its molecular formula, Zearalenone (ZON) is the main member of a growing family of biologically important "resorcylic acid lactones" (RALs), which have been found in nature. ZON is produced by several Fusarium species, which colonize maize, barley, oat, wheat, and sorghum and tend to develop ZON during prolonged cool, wet growing and harvest seasons (38). Maize is the most frequently contaminated crop plant, and therefore, ZON can be found frequently in animal feeding stuff. Occurrence, toxicity, and metabolism data of ZON were summarized by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) (5) and in recent reviews (12,38).The potent xenohormone ZON leads to hyperestrogenism symptoms and in extreme cases to infertility problems, especially in pigs (15). Ovarian changes in pigs have been noted with toxin levels as low as of 50 g/kg in the diet (1). Ruminants are more tolerant to ZON ingestion; however, hyperestrogenic syndrome, including restlessness, diarrhea, infertility, decreased milk yields, and abortion, have been well documented with cattle and sheep (4, 29).Because widespread ZON contamination in feed can occur in problematic years, efficient ways to detoxify are desirable. The transformation of mycotoxins to nontoxic metabolites by pure cultures of microorganisms or by cell-free enzyme preparations (3) is an attractive possibility. Microbial metabolization of ZON to alpha-ZOL and beta-ZOL cannot be regarded as detoxification, because both ZOL products are still estrogenic (14). Also, formation of ZON-glucosides and -diglucosides (8, 17) and ZON-sulfate (7) cannot be considered true detoxification but rather formation of masked mycotoxins, because the conjugates may be hydrolyzed during digestion (11,23), releasing ZON again (2).As the estrogenic activity of ZON and its derivates can be explained by its chemical structure, which resembles natural estrogens (20), it can be expected that cleavage of the lactone undecyl ring system of ZON results in permanent detoxification.El-Sharkawy and Abul-Hajj (9) were the first to report inactivation of ZON after opening of the lactone ring by Gliocladium roseum. This filamentous fungus was capable of metabolizing ZON in yields of 80 to 90%. Also Takahashi-Ando et al. (31) described the degradation reaction of ZON with Clonostachys rosea (synonym of G. roseum...
An untargeted metabolomics workflow for the detection of metabolites derived from endogenous or exogenous tracer substances is presented. To this end, a recently developed stable isotope-assisted LC–HRMS-based metabolomics workflow for the global annotation of biological samples has been further developed and extended. For untargeted detection of metabolites arising from labeled tracer substances, isotope pattern recognition has been adjusted to account for nonlabeled moieties conjugated to the native and labeled tracer molecules. Furthermore, the workflow has been extended by (i) an optional ion intensity ratio check, (ii) the automated combination of positive and negative ionization mode mass spectra derived from fast polarity switching, and (iii) metabolic feature annotation. These extensions enable the automated, unbiased, and global detection of tracer-derived metabolites in complex biological samples. The workflow is demonstrated with the metabolism of 13C9-phenylalanine in wheat cell suspension cultures in the presence of the mycotoxin deoxynivalenol (DON). In total, 341 metabolic features (150 in positive and 191 in negative ionization mode) corresponding to 139 metabolites were detected. The benefit of fast polarity switching was evident, with 32 and 58 of these metabolites having exclusively been detected in the positive and negative modes, respectively. Moreover, for 19 of the remaining 49 phenylalanine-derived metabolites, the assignment of ion species and, thus, molecular weight was possible only by the use of complementary features of the two ion polarity modes. Statistical evaluation showed that treatment with DON increased or decreased the abundances of many detected metabolites.
The Fusarium mycotoxins HT-2 toxin (HT2) and T-2 toxin (T2) are frequent contaminants in oats. These toxins, but also their plant metabolites, may contribute to toxicological effects. This work describes the use of 13C-assisted liquid chromatography–high-resolution mass spectrometry for the first comprehensive study on the biotransformation of HT2 and T2 in oats. Using this approach, 16 HT2 and 17 T2 metabolites were annotated including novel glycosylated and hydroxylated forms of the toxins, hydrolysis products, and conjugates with acetic acid, putative malic acid, malonic acid, and ferulic acid. Further targeted quantitative analysis was performed to study toxin metabolism over time, as well as toxin and conjugate mobility within non-treated plant tissues. As a result, HT2-3-O-β-d-glucoside was identified as the major detoxification product of both parent toxins, which was rapidly formed (to an extent of 74% in HT2-treated and 48% in T2-treated oats within one day after treatment) and further metabolised. Mobility of the parent toxins appeared to be negligible, while HT2-3-O-β-d-glucoside was partly transported (up to approximately 4%) through panicle side branches and stem. Our findings demonstrate that the presented combination of untargeted and targeted analysis is well suited for the comprehensive elucidation of mycotoxin metabolism in plants.
In this paper, the structure and the identity of fully 13C-substituted T-2 toxin were confirmed using high-resolution mass spectrometry, 1H-NMR, 13C-NMR, tandem mass spectrometry and HPLC-DAD. The purity of this compound was estimated to be at least 98.8% according to UV data. The isotopic distribution of (13C(24)) T-2 toxin indicated a total isotopic enrichment of 98.2 +/- 1.0 atom% 13C, and the application of different MS measurement modes revealed the MS/MS fragmentation pattern of T-2 toxin. Furthermore, a stable isotope dilution mass spectrometry method for the quantification of T-2 toxin was developed using (13C(24)) T-2 toxin as internal standard. The method was evaluated with and without conventional clean-up and validated for maize and oats. Both cereals showed strong matrix enhancement effects, which could be compensated for through the application of the isotope-substituted internal standard.
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