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Determination of clavulanic acid residue in milk by high performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry
Author(s) -
Gang Yao,
Xianhui Huang,
Chunna Guo,
Qiuhua Fang,
Limin He
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
sepu/chinese journal of chromatography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.171
H-Index - 19
eISSN - 1872-2059
pISSN - 1000-8713
DOI - 10.3724/sp.j.1123.2012.02003
Subject(s) - chromatography , chemistry , detection limit , formic acid , residue (chemistry) , calibration curve , ammonium acetate , high performance liquid chromatography , mass spectrometry , selected reaction monitoring , tandem mass spectrometry , electrospray ionization , analytical chemistry (journal) , biochemistry
An analytical method was developed for the determination of clavulanic acid (CLAV) in milk by high performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC-MS/MS). A 2 g milk sample was deproteinized by ethanol. The supernatant was transferred into a pear-shaped bottle to be evaporated to about 0.5 mL, and the residue was dissolved with ammonium acetate solution. The sample was determined by HPLC-MS/MS after the purification. The chromatographic separation was achieved on a Luna 5u C8 column using 0.1% formic acid in water and acetonitrile as mobile phases with gradient elution. The identification of CLAV was carried out by MS/MS equipped with electrospray ionization in negative scanning and multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) modes. Matrix-matched calibration standard was used for the quantification. The calibration curve showed perfect linear in the range of 10 - 400 microg/kg with the correlation coefficient of 0.999. The limit of detection (LOD, S/N > or = 3) was 10 microg/kg in milk, and the limit of quantification (LOQ, S/N > or = 10) was 20 microg/kg. The mean recoveries varied from 80.00% to 91.25% at the four spiked levels of LOQ, 1/2MRL (the maximum residue limit), MRL, and 2MRL with the relative standard deviations of 5.60% -8.77%. In conclusion, the established method can be applied for the determination of CLAV residues in milk.

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