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Liquid Chromatographic Determination of Paralytic Shellfish Poisons in Shellfish After Prechromatographic Oxidation

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Specialty Chemistry
Date 1991 Nov 1
PMID 1661726
Citations 6
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Abstract

A liquid chromatographic method for quantitating paralytic shellfish poison toxins in shellfish has been developed in which the toxins are converted to fluorescent purines by prechromatographic oxidation under mildly basic conditions with hydrogen peroxide or periodate. The addition of ammonium formate to the periodate oxidation reaction greatly improved the yield of fluorescent derivatives for neosaxitoxin, gonyautoxin-1, B-2, and C-3 compared to the same reaction without ammonium formate. As little as 3-6 ng of each of the nonhydroxylated toxins and 7-12 ng of the hydroxylated compounds per gram of shellfish could be detected. Reversed-phase chromatography using ammonium formate in the mobile phase improved the chromatography of neosaxitoxin and B-2 compared to results obtained earlier. Because the oxidation products of neosaxitoxin and B-2 could not be separated, parent compounds were separated before oxidation by using an SPE-COOH ion exchange cartridge. The repeatability coefficient of variation for the oxidation reactions ranged from 3 to 8% for the peroxide reaction, and from 4 to 11% for the periodate reaction, depending upon the individual toxin determined and its concentration in the extract (0.04-0.55 micrograms/g). The method was compared to the mouse bioassay and the postcolumn oxidation method. In most cases, results were comparable.

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