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MSDS Authoring Services and Software Tools Outsource Your MSDS Authoring to Wercs® Professional Services and Become Compliant Today! For more than 20 years, The Wercs® has provided the chemical industry with the most comprehensive MSDS authoring software. Now, no matter how large or small your organization, this same software can benefit you today through Wercs Professional Services and its team of certified authors. With Wercs Professional Services you can now easily: •Outsource 1 or 100 MSDSs • Satisfy deadlines with our 48-hour TAT • Delegate difficult geographies or MSDS translation requirements Rely on The WERCS® software tools to: • Satisfy your REACH and GHS requirements • Automate the authoring, managing, and distributing of your MSDSs TheÉfecs® !:aru:e Systems Worldwide Environmental Regulate To learn more about our software and services, call us at 1-800-572-6501, or visit our Web site at www.thewercs.com. TESTING OUR FOOD ACS MEETING NEWS: Analytical chemists are developing new methods to assess food safety CELIA HENRY ARNAUD, C&EN WASHINGTON FROM BACTERIA on spinach, melamine in pet food, and unapproved drugs and ad- ditives in fish, food safety is increasingly grabbing headlines. What can be done to ensure the safety of the food supply? A first step is developing methods that accurately identify toxic compounds in food. Recent incidents, such as last year's spinach scare and this year's contamina- tion of seafood imports, have shown the need for improved testing (see page 83). "New techniques on both the detection end and the extraction end are of real interest to a lot of people," said Greg Noonan, a chemist at the Food & Drug Administration's Center for Food Safety & Applied Nutrition, in College Park, Md. Noonan and his colleague Lowri S. de Jager organized a symposium on new methods for food safety analysis. A sec- ond symposium, organized by Michael S. Young and Joe P. Romano of Waters Corp., focused on food analysis by chromatogra- phy coupled with mass spectrometry. Both symposia were sponsored by the Division of Analytical Chemistry at last month's American Chemical Society national meet- ing in Boston. Protecting the food supply requires ana- lytical methods that are sensitive, rapid, and high-throughput, De Jager said. Identi- fication is more important than quantifica- tion, she said, as long as appropriate mini- mum detection levels are attained. A first step in most food analysis is extraction of the components of interest from the food. The complexity of the ma- trix complicates food analysis and affects the performance of any extraction method. Quantification often requires addition of increasing amounts of a standard solution of known concentration to the sample. Using the banned rodenticide tetrameth- ylene disulfotetramine (tetramine) as a model compound, De Jager compared sev- eral modern extraction techniques, includ- ing solid-phase microextraction (SPME) and sorptive stir bar extraction. She spiked tetramine into a variety of foods and bever- ages (none of the samples started out with it). With all the methods, less of the tetramine was recovered from more complex foods such HOW FRESH? A simple sensor could help people determine whether to eat or toss that fish. In this prototype, the faint colored line indicates that the condition of the fish is "fair." apple- sauce and peanut butter than from beverages. The most sensitive meth- odparticularly for the solid foods—ex- tracted the tetramine with polymer-coated magnetic stir bars. Another sample preparation method involves the use of molecularly imprint- ed materials. These can be thought of as ar- tificial receptors made by polymerizing and cross-linking a material in the presence of a template molecule. When the template is washed away, a binding site for the analyte remains. Marta Elena Diaz-Garcia of the Univer- sity of Oviedo, in Spain, described the use of such molecularly imprinted materials for food analysis. The imprinted materials can be used as chromatographic stationary phases and sensors for antibiotics, pesti- w WW.CEN-ONLINE.ORG Q2 SEPTEMBER 24. 2007 REQUEST MORE AT ADINFONOW.ORG COURTESY OF JOHN LAVIGNE

TESTING OUR FOOD

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Page 1: TESTING OUR FOOD

MSDS Authoring Services and Software Tools

Outsource Your

MSDS Authoring to

Wercs® Professional

Services and Become

Compliant Today!

For more than 20 years, The Wercs® has provided the chemical industry with the most comprehensive MSDS authoring software. Now, no matter how large or small your organization, this same software can benefit you today through Wercs Professional Services and its team of certified authors.

With Wercs Professional Services you can now easily:

•Outsource 1 or 100 MSDSs

• Satisfy deadlines with our 48-hour TAT

• Delegate difficult geographies or MSDS translation requirements

Rely on The WERCS® software tools to:

• Satisfy your REACH and GHS requirements

• Automate the authoring, managing, and distributing of your MSDSs

TheÉfecs® !:aru:e Systems Worldwide Environmental Regulate

To learn more about our software and services, call us at 1-800-572-6501, or visit our Web site at

www.thewercs.com.

TESTING OUR FOOD ACS MEETING NEWS: Analytical chemists are

developing new methods to assess food safety CELIA HENRY ARNAUD, C&EN WASHINGTON

FROM BACTERIA on spinach, melamine in pet food, and unapproved drugs and ad­ditives in fish, food safety is increasingly grabbing headlines. What can be done to ensure the safety of the food supply? A first step is developing methods that accurately identify toxic compounds in food.

Recent incidents, such as last year's spinach scare and this year's contamina­tion of seafood imports, have shown the need for improved testing (see page 83). "New techniques on both the detection end and the extraction end are of real interest to a lot of people," said Greg Noonan, a chemist at the Food & Drug Administration's Center for Food Safety & Applied Nutrition, in College Park, Md.

Noonan and his colleague Lowri S. de Jager organized a symposium on new methods for food safety analysis. A sec­ond symposium, organized by Michael S. Young and Joe P. Romano of Waters Corp., focused on food analysis by chromatogra­phy coupled with mass spectrometry. Both symposia were sponsored by the Division of Analytical Chemistry at last month's American Chemical Society national meet­ing in Boston.

Protecting the food supply requires ana­lytical methods that are sensitive, rapid, and high-throughput, De Jager said. Identi­fication is more important than quantifica­tion, she said, as long as appropriate mini­mum detection levels are attained.

A first step in most food analysis is extraction of the components of interest from the food. The complexity of the ma­trix complicates food analysis and affects the performance of any extraction method. Quantification often requires addition of increasing amounts of a standard solution of known concentration to the sample.

Using the banned rodenticide tetrameth-ylene disulfotetramine (tetramine) as a model compound, De Jager compared sev­eral modern extraction techniques, includ­ing solid-phase microextraction (SPME) and sorptive stir bar extraction. She spiked tetramine into a variety of foods and bever­

ages (none of the samples started out with it). With all the methods, less of the tetramine was recovered from more complex foods such

HOW FRESH? A simple sensor could help people determine whether to eat or toss that fish. In this prototype, the faint colored line indicates that the condition of the fish is "fair."

apple­sauce and peanut butter than from beverages. The most sensitive meth­od—particularly for the solid foods—ex­tracted the tetramine with polymer-coated magnetic stir bars.

Another sample preparation method involves the use of molecularly imprint­ed materials. These can be thought of as ar­tificial receptors made by polymerizing and cross-linking a material in the presence of a template molecule. When the template is washed away, a binding site for the analyte remains.

Marta Elena Diaz-Garcia of the Univer­sity of Oviedo, in Spain, described the use of such molecularly imprinted materials for food analysis. The imprinted materials can be used as chromatographic stationary phases and sensors for antibiotics, pesti-

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SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

cides, herbicides, trace metals, pathogenic organisms, or food additives. Diaz-Garcia described examples of molecularly im­printed materials for analysis of flavonols (common plant metabolites) and the anti­biotic chloramphenicol. The molecular im­printing for each application must be done with different polymers and solvents.

One problem with molecularly imprinted materials is that the standard methods for making the materials rely on organic solvents, Diaz-Garcia said. She turned to sol-gel technology as a way to make the methods and materials more water-friendly. The sol-gel process is used to make glass or ceramic materials from a colloidal suspen­sion of solid particles. She successfully used nafcillin-imprinted sol-gels to detect the an­tibiotic, which is used to treat farm animals.

MICROFLUIDIC DEVICES are another tool that may be useful for food analysis.

Chemist Greg E. Collins and cowork­ers at the Naval Research Laboratory (NRL) in Washington, D.C., are using chip-based capillary electrophoresis (CE) to analyze beverages. Such chip-based methods are faster than other methods and are potentially portable,

Collins said. In one case, Collins and Qin Lu use

contactless conductivity detection, in which the electrodes are situated above the analyte-conveying microchannel but don't touch it. This alleviates any worries about sample fouling the electrodes.

They measured sodium monofluoroac-

etate, a banned rodent poison, in juice | (all samples were intentionally spiked =j with the poison). They diluted and fil- £ tered the juice prior to analysis to pre- g vent clogging of the microchannels. £ To eliminate interference from matrix w components, such as citrate and other ξ organic anions, they decreased the pH 8 of the CE running buffer from the 6.5 usually used with conductivity detec­tion to 3.5 using citrate itself as the buffer component.

In other work, Collins and Carl Newman, a National Research Coun­cil postdoc at NRL, used chip CE with ultraviolet absorbance spectral detection over abroad wavelength range to measure the poisonous alkaloids nicotine, colchi­cine, strychnine, and aconitine in juice and milk. They used micelles (aggregates of surfactant molecules) in the buffer to concentrate the alkaloids and improve de­tection. At the point of detection, a "bubble cell"—a deeper segment of the microchan­nel—lengthens the light path and improves sensitivity. The depth of the bubble cell must be carefully controlled to balance the improved sensitivity with degraded separa­tion resolution.

Mass spectrometry is another power­ful tool for monitoring food safety. FDA's Noonan used a new ionization method called DART, or direct analysis in real time, to look for perfluorochemicals in food packaging and wrappers. This family of chemicals is permitted to contact food under specified conditions. Recent studies

on one class of these CHANNELING This chemicals, polyalkyl chip-based capillary nhosnhare siirfac- electrophoresis pnospnate surrac d e v j œ c a n b e

tants, suggest that u s e d f o r beverage their ingestion and analysis. metabolism may BBHi lead to increased levels of perfluo-rooctanoic acid, a known rat carcinogen, in blood and tissue.

With DART, samples are analyzed with­out any preparation or extraction. Noonan analyzed perfluorochemicals directly from paper sandwich wrappers, pizza boxes, and microwave popcorn bags. He obtained "mixed results," he said. He could identify some expected ions but not others.

At Waters, meanwhile, MS is being paired with liquid chromatography. Ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC), with its higher pressures and smaller column-packing materials, speeds

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Page 3: TESTING OUR FOOD

up the analysis and improves resolution and sensitivity relative to standard LC, according to Romano, senior manager for chemical analysis at Waters. Combin­ing UPLC with a triple-quadrupole mass spectrometer improves the quantitative accuracy.

Using UPLC-MS, Romano analyzed 52 pesticide residues in baby cereals. Regulato­ry agencies require that the mass spectrum identify at least two transitions—the com­bination of particular parent and fragment ions—per pesticide to confirm a pesticide's presence, so Romano needed to monitor a total of 104 transitions. He used multiple-reaction monitoring (MRM), in which the mass spectrometer is rapidly switched between specific parent and fragment ions, rather than scanning the entire mass spec­trum. MRM could keep up with the rapid UPLC separation, making it possible to ana­lyze all 52 pesticides in 7 minutes.

Michael S. Young, another Waters chem­ist, described the analysis of sulfonamide antibacterial drugs (sulfa drugs) in milk using UPLC-MS. Because sulfa drugs have a common aminobenzyl fragment ion, Young did a full scan on the first quadru-pole and monitored the common fragment with the second quadrupole. He was able to analyze 10 sulfonamides in 3.5 minutes.

FISH is of particular concern on the safety front. Zongwei Cai of Hong Kong Baptist University analyzed malachite green (MG) in fish from markets in Hong Kong. MG prevents fungal and parasitic infections in

fish, but because it is harmful to humans, it has been banned in aquaculture in many countries, including China. Nevertheless, MG and its primary metabolite, leuco-MG, continue to be found in fish.

Because Cai wants to analyze MG and leuco-MG simultaneously, mass spectrom­etry is a better choice than fluorescence spectroscopy as leuco-MG lacks a fluoro-phore. Using mass spectral analysis, Cai detected MG and leuco-MG in grouper bought at fish markets but not in tilapia or carp purchased at supermarkets, suggesting that the fish in supermarkets maybe safer.

Mass spectrometry certainly can be used to analyze fish in the laboratory. But what if people want something they can use at home to tell them if a piece offish is safe to eat? John J. Lavigne hopes that his conjugat­ed polymer sensors will solve that problem.

Lavigne, an assistant chemistry profes­sor at the University of South Carolina, is developing sensors for biogenic amines such as histamine, cadaverine, and pu­trescent These and many other amines are naturally present in fish, but elevated levels indicate spoilage.

The polymers in the sensors are made from thiophene with a carboxylic acid side chain. In organic solvents, the side chains bind the analytes and cause conformational changes in the polymer backbone. In ad­dition, the polymers stack to form stable aggregates in solution, resulting in π-π in­teractions, which can cause changes in the polymer absorbance spectrum. Thus, differ­ent analytes form different color clusters.

The color also depends on the solvent that the polymer is in. By using one poly­mer in several different solvents, Lavigne can create a cross-reactive sensor array. He can achieve a similar effect in water by us­ing different metal counterions.

He is turning the polymer sensor into a dipstick test for fish freshness. The polymer is placed on a strip of paper. When a food sample is applied, a line of color moves along an indicator strip on the paper. The further up the strip the line travels, the worse the condition of the sample. He has used the dipstick to measure histamine spiked into canned tuna and other amines that form as part offish degradation.

Currently, the sensor gives a graduated response. "If it's good, you can eat it; if it's poor, you don't eat it; if it's fair, what do you do?" Lavigne says. "It mayjust depend on how hungry you are." He wants to calibrate the response so that the test provides clear answers about whether something is safe to eat.

These and other sample prep and detec­tion techniques could help ensure food safety. With the food supply traveling from all corners of the globe, such analytical techniques will only grow in importance. Noonan believes that fast detection tech­niques alone won't provide the speed needed for efficient food safety monitor­ing. "You can have a fast analysis, but it's not very worthwhile if you're still spending an hour and a half doing your sample work­up," he said. "The throughput is not always on the analytical end." •

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