4.7 Article

Improved detection of multiple environmental antibiotics through an optimized sample extraction strategy in liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 407, Issue 30, Pages 9071-9083

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-015-9074-7

Keywords

Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry; pK(a); Antibiotics; Extraction efficiency; Surface waters; Urban soils

Funding

  1. Singapore National Research Foundation under its Environment and Water Technologies Strategic Research Programme
  2. Singapore Ministry of Education [R-302-000-051-133]
  3. Singapore-Peking-Oxford Research Enterprise [COY-15-EWI-RCFSA/N197-1]
  4. Purdue University
  5. [1102-IRIS-12-02]

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A solid-phase extraction/liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/multi-stage mass spectrometry (SPE-LC-ESI-MS/MS) method was optimized in this study for sensitive and simultaneous detection of multiple antibiotics in urban surface waters and soils. Among the seven classes of tested antibiotics, extraction efficiencies of macrolides, lincosamide, chloramphenicol, and polyether antibiotics were significantly improved under optimized sample extraction pH. Instead of only using acidic extraction in many existing studies, the results indicated that antibiotics with low pK (a) values (< 7) were extracted more efficiently under acidic conditions and antibiotics with high pK (a) values (> 7) were extracted more efficiently under neutral conditions. The effects of pH were more obvious on polar compounds than those on non-polar compounds. Optimization of extraction pH resulted in significantly improved sample recovery and better detection limits. Compared with reported values in the literature, the average reduction of minimal detection limits obtained in this study was 87.6 % in surface waters (0.06-2.28 ng/L) and 67.1 % in soils (0.01-18.16 ng/g dry wt). This method was subsequently applied to detect antibiotics in environmental samples in a heavily populated urban city, and macrolides, sulfonamides, and lincomycin were frequently detected. Antibiotics with highest detected concentrations were sulfamethazine (82.5 ng/L) in surface waters and erythromycin (6.6 ng/g dry wt) in soils. The optimized sample extraction strategy can be used to improve the detection of a variety of antibiotics in environmental surface waters and soils.

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