Rationale
More than half of surveyed microalgae and over 90% of harmful algae have an obligate requirement for vitamin B12, but methods for directly measuring dissolved B12 in seawater are scarce due to low concentrations and rapid light‐induced hydrolysis.
Methods
We present a method to detect and measure the four main congeners of vitamin B12 dissolved in seawater. The method includes solid‐phase extraction, separation by ultrahigh‐performance liquid chromatography and detection by triple‐quadrupole tandem mass spectrometry utilizing an electrospray ion source. This method was applied to coastal field samples collected in the German Bay, Baltic Sea and the Danish Limfjord system.
Results
The total dissolved B12 pool ranged between 0.5 and 2.1 pM. Under ambient conditions methyl‐B12 and adenosyl‐B12 were nearly fully hydrolyzed to hydroxy‐B12 in less than 1 h. Hydroxy‐B12 and a novel, corresponding isomer were the main forms of B12 found at all field sites. This isomer eluted well after the OH‐B12 peak and was also detected in commercially available OH‐B12. Both compounds showed very high similarity in their collision‐induced dissociation spectra.
Conclusions
The high instability of the biologically active forms of Me‐B12 and Ado‐B12 towards hydrolysis was shown, highlighting the importance of reducing the duration of the extraction protocol. In addition, the vitamin B12 pool in the study area was mostly comprised of a previously undescribed isomer of OH‐B12. Further studies into the structure of this isomer and its bioavailability are needed.
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