We conclude that the developed LC/MS/MS method is well suited to quantify multiple mycotoxin biomarkers in human urine down to the sub-ppb range within 18 min and without any prior cleanup. The co-occurrence of several mycotoxins in the investigated samples clearly emphasizes the great potential and importance of this method to assess exposure of humans and animals to naturally occurring mycotoxins.
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.
To investigate the metabolic fate
of HT-2 toxin (HT2) and T-2 toxin
(T2) in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.), an untargeted
metabolomics study utilizing stable isotopic labeling and liquid chromatography–high
resolution mass spectrometry was performed. In total, 11 HT2 and 12
T2 derived in planta biotransformation products were
annotated putatively. In addition to previously reported mono- and
diglucosylated forms of HT2, evidence for the formation of HT2-malonyl-glucoside
and feruloyl-T2, as well as acetylation and deacetylation products
in wheat was obtained for the first time. To monitor the kinetics
of metabolite formation, a time course experiment was conducted involving
the Fusarium head blight susceptible variety Remus and the resistant
cultivar CM-82036. Biotransformation reactions were observed already
at the earliest tested time point (6 h after treatment), and formed
metabolites showed different kinetic profiles. After ripening, less
than 15% of the toxins added to the plants were determined to be unmetabolized.
We report the identification of deoxynivalenol-3-sulfate and deoxynivalenol-15-sulfate as two novel metabolites of the trichothecene mycotoxin deoxynivalenol in wheat. Wheat ears which were either artificially infected with Fusarium graminearum or directly treated with the major Fusarium toxin deoxynivalenol (DON) were sampled 96 h after treatment. Reference standards, which have been chemically synthesized and confirmed by NMR, were used to establish a liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization (LC-ESI)-MS/MS-based “dilute and shoot” method for the detection, unambiguous identification, and quantification of both sulfate conjugates in wheat extracts. Using this approach, detection limits of 0.003 mg/kg for deoxynivalenol-3-sulfate and 0.002 mg/kg for deoxynivalenol-15-sulfate were achieved. Matrix-matched calibration was used for the quantification of DON-sulfates in the investigated samples. In DON-treated samples, DON-3-sulfate was detected in the range of 0.29–1.4 mg/kg fresh weight while DON-15-sulfate concentrations were significantly lower (range 0.015–0.061 mg/kg fresh weight). In Fusarium-infected wheat samples, DON-3-sulfate was the only detected sulfate conjugate (range 0.022–0.059 mg/kg fresh weight). These results clearly demonstrate the potential of wheat to form sulfate conjugates of DON. In order to test whether sulfation is a detoxification reaction in planta, we determined the ability of the sulfated DON derivatives to inhibit in vitro protein synthesis of wheat ribosomes. The results demonstrate that both DON-sulfates can be regarded as detoxification products. DON-15-sulfate was about 44× less inhibitory than the native toxin, and no toxicity was observed for DON-3-sulfate in the tested range.Graphical abstractᅟElectronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s00216-014-8340-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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