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Publication
Featured researches published by Anton Kaufmann.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2008
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; Mirjam Widmer
A quantitative multiresidue method covering more than 100 veterinary drugs, belonging to different drug families, has been developed. The proposed approach uses an liquid-liquid-solid extraction technique (bi-polarity extraction) which is capable in recovering polar, medium polar and apolar compounds. A thorough generic reversed phase solid-phase extraction (SPE) clean-up removes interfering proteins and provides clean and stable extracts. Dedicated rinsing steps are proposed to reduce analyte adsorption on glass walls and on precipitating proteins. The resulting extract is analyzed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) coupled to time of flight mass spectrometry (TOF). The method was validated according to the Commission Decision 2002/657/EEC. Validation coved the relevant meat matrices (muscle, kidney and liver).
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2010
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; S. Walker; Mirjam Widmer
The selectivity of mass traces obtained by monitoring liquid chromatography coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry (LC-HRMS) and liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was compared. A number of blank extracts (fish, pork kidney, pork liver and honey) were separated by ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC). Detected were some 100 dummy transitions respectively dummy exact masses (traces). These dummy masses were the product of a random generator. The range of the permitted masses corresponded to those which are typical for analytes (e.g. veterinary drugs). The large number of monitored dummy traces ensured that endogenous compounds present in the matrix extract, produced a significant number of detectable chromatographic peaks. All obtained chromatographic peaks were integrated and standardized. Standardisation was done by dividing these absolute peak areas by the average response of a set of 7 different veterinary drugs. This permitted a direct comparison between the LC-HRMS and LC-MS/MS data. The data indicated that the selectivity of LC-HRMS exceeds LC-MS/MS, if high resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) data is recorded with a resolution of 50,000 full width at half maximum (FWHM) and a corresponding mass window. This conclusion was further supported by experimental data (MS/MS based trace analysis), where a false positive finding was observed. An endogenous matrix compound present in honey matrix behaved like a banned nitroimidazole drug. This included identical retention time and two MRM traces, producing an MRM ratio between them, which perfectly matched the ratio observed in the external standard. HRMS measurement clearly resolved the interfering matrix compound and unmasked the false positive MS/MS finding.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2011
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; S. Walker; Mirjam Widmer
Multi-residue methods for veterinary drugs or pesticides in food are increasingly often based on ultra performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) coupled to high resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS). Previous available time of flight (TOF) technologies, showing resolutions up to 15,000 full width at half maximum (FWHM), were not sufficiently selective for monitoring low residue concentrations in difficult matrices (e.g. hormones in tissue or antibiotics in honey). The approach proposed in this paper is based on a single stage Orbitrap mass spectrometer operated at 50,000 FWHM. Extracts (liver and kidney) which were produced according to a validated multi-residue method (time of flight detection based) could not be analyzed by Orbitrap because of extensive signal suppression. This required the improvement of established extraction and clean-up procedures. The introduced, more extensive deproteinzation steps and dedicated instrumental settings successfully eliminated these detrimental suppression effects. The reported method, covering more than 100 different veterinary dugs, was validated according to the EU Commission Decision 2002/657/EEC. Validated matrices include muscle, kidney, liver, fish and honey. Significantly better performance parameters (e.g. linearity, reproducibility and detection limits) were obtained when comparing the new method with the older, TOF based method. These improvements are attributed to the higher resolution (50,000 versus 12,000 FWHM) and the superior mass stability of the of the Orbitrap over the previously utilized TOF instrument.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2011
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; Stephan Walker; Miryam Widmer
The quantitative and confirmative performance of two different mass spectrometry (MS) techniques (high-resolution MS and tandem MS) was critically compared. Evaluated was a new extraction and clean-up protocol which was developed to cover more than 100 different veterinary drugs at trace levels in a number of animal tissues and honey matrices. Both detection techniques, high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) (single-stage Orbitrap instrument operated at 50 000 full width at half maximum) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) (quadrupole technology) were used to validate the method according to the EU Commission Decision 2002/657/EEC. Equal or even a slightly better quantitative performance was observed for the HRMS-based approach. Sensitivity is higher for unit mass resolution MS/MS if only a subset of the 100 compounds has to be monitored. Confirmation of suspected positive findings can be done by evaluating the intensity ratio between different MS/MS transitions, or by accurate mass based product ion traces (no precursor selection applied). MS/MS relies on compound-specific optimized transitions; hence the second, confirmatory transition generally shows relatively high ion abundance (fragmentation efficacy). This is often not the case in single-stage HRMS, since a generic (not compound-optimized) collision energy is applied. Hence, confirmation of analytes present at low levels is superior when performed by MS/MS. Slightly better precision, but poorer accuracy (fortified matrix extracts versus pure standard solution) of ion ratios were observed when comparing data obtained by HRMS versus MS/MS.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2012
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden
A quantitative LC-MS/MS method was developed for the determination of 13 commonly used aminoglycoside antibiotics in meat (pork muscle, fish, and veal livers and kidneys). The proposed method is sufficiently sensitive and highly selective. Unlike other previously reported methods, it uses a simple clean-up procedure based on a strong cation-exchange solid-phase cartridge that permits high sample extract loading volumes. A unique elution regime based on a volatile buffer at intermediately high pH value in combination with an organic solvent provides quantitative elution of the various aminoglycosides. This methodology ensured that neither a breakthrough of weakly retained aminoglycosides (e.g. spectinomycin) nor the incomplete elution of strongly retained analytes (e.g. neo- and gentamycin) is observed. The single-step clean-up is fast and produces clean extracts that minimize matrix-related signal suppression in the electrospray interface.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2009
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; Mirjam Widmer; Kevin Giles; Diana Uría
Multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) ratios as provided by tandem mass spectrometers are used to confirm positive residue findings (e.g. veterinary drugs or pesticides). The Commission Decision 2002/657/EEC defines tolerance levels for MRM ratios, which are intended to prevent the reporting of false positives. This paper reports findings where blank sample extracts have been spiked by a drug (difloxacin) and the corresponding measured MRM ratios significantly deviated from MRM ratios observed in matrix-free solution. The observation was explained by the formation of two different [M+H](+) analyte ions within the electrospray ionization (ESI) interface. These two ions vary only by the site of analyte protonation. Since they are isobaric, they are equally transmitted through the first quadrupole, but are differently fragmented in the collision chamber. The existence of two isobaric ions was deduced by statistical data and the observation of a doubly charged analyte ion. It was hypothesized that the combined presence of [M+H](+) and [M+2H](2+) implies the existence of two different singly charged ion species differing only by the site of protonation. Low- and high-energy interface-induced fragmentation was performed on the samples. The surviving precursor ion population was mass selected and again fragmented in the collision chamber. Equal product ion spectra would be expected. However, very different product ion spectra were observed for the two interface regimes. This is consistent with the assumption that the two postulated isobaric precursor ions show different stability in the interface. Hence the abundance ratio among the two types of surviving precursor ions will shift and change the resulting product ion spectra. The existence of the postulated singly charged ions with multiple chargeable sites was finally confirmed by successful ion mobility separation.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2009
Andreas Schürmann; Veronika Dvorak; Claudio Crüzer; Patrick Butcher; Anton Kaufmann
In pesticide residue analysis using liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) the confirmation of a sebuthylazine finding in a tarragon (Artemisia dranunculus) sample was demonstrated to be false positive. A coeluting interfering matrix compound produced product ions in MS/MS analysis, perfectly corresponding to the multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) of two sebuthylazine transitions. Using the EU directive 2002/657/EC which regulates the confirmation of suspected positive findings would have resulted in a false-positive finding. A third LC/MS/MS transition with a deviant ion ratio and a gas chromatography (GC)/MS/MS analysis revealed the false-positive results. With optimized high resolving ultra-performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) conditions it was possible to separate spiked sebuthylazine from the interfering matrix compound. Using its exact mass and isotope ratios from LC/time-of-flight (TOF) MS measurements, the compound was identified as nepellitorine, a - not surprising - endogenous alkamide in tarragon (Arthemisia dranunculus). False-positive results, especially in heavy matrix samples such as herbs, can be dealt with by further confirmatory analysis, e.g. a third transition, GC analysis if possible or more advantageous by an orthogonal criterion like exact mass.
Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2010
Anton Kaufmann; Miryam Widmer; Kathryn Maden
Signal suppression is a common issue when analyzing compounds by liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). Suppression of signals is caused by co-eluting matrix compounds and is thought to take place in the interface. This paper reports strong signal suppression effects which were observed when using a single-stage Orbitrap instrument which was coupled by an electrospray interface to a liquid chromatograph. This type of signal suppression (often the complete loss of certain analyte signal) is observed in addition to signal suppression originating in the electrospray interface. The location of where this phenomenon occurs was shown to be clearly beyond the interface region. It was suspected that not the Orbitrap cell itself, but the C-trap, which is an integral part within the Orbitrap instrument, was the probable location. Such post-interface signal suppression was observed--and could be experimentally induced--when multiply charged ions (e.g. electrospray protonated proteins) were co-eluting with the analytes. High concentrations of proteins, yet not exceeding the maximum ion capacity of the trap, can cause a complete loss of all low m/z masses. This paper describes the practical implication when analyzing heavy matrix samples and discusses strategies to reduce such detrimental effects.
Analyst | 2011
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; Stephan Walker; Miryam Widmer
Some twenty cultured fish samples were analyzed for possible residues of veterinary drugs with high resolution mass spectrometry (single stage Orbitrap) coupled to ultra performance liquid chromatography. Quantitative analysis based on external standards covered 110 analytes. Some 116 additional compounds were monitored without having access to reference materials. Detection was based on calculated exact masses and narrow mass windows. Furthermore, a number of semi-targeted techniques were evaluated and compared to corresponding triple quadrupole precursor scan experiments. Single stage high resolution mass spectrometry was used to monitor compound specific product ions (without relying on a previous precursor selection). The capabilities of neutral loss searches based on exact masses were shown by detecting small concentrations of incurred oxytetracycline residues. High resolution mass spectrometry provided more sensitivity and selectivity than corresponding tandem quadrupole precursor and neutral loss scans. The currently limiting factor is the not adequate performance of the available software used for data mining. The high number of false positives that were produced, when searching for chlorine isotopic patterns, was clearly linked to the fact that the utilized software does not perform a peak deconvolution, but simply investigates one individual spectrum after another.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 2014
Anton Kaufmann; Patrick Butcher; Kathryn Maden; S. Walker; Mirjam Widmer
A quantitative liquid chromatography coupled with high-resolution mass spectrometry method was developed for the determination of more than one hundred compounds belonging to a variety of veterinary drug classes in bovine milk. Salting out supported liquid extraction (SOSLE), a novel extraction and cleanup technique, was introduced to ensure high extraction efficiency and good sample cleanup. The high salt (ammonium sulfate) concentration in the aqueous donor phase permits supported liquid/liquid extraction (SLE) with a relative polar organic acceptor phase (acetonitrile). This is different from traditional SLE, in which the need for phase separation results in the selection of organic solvents with intermediate polarities (e.g., ethyl acetate or dichloromethane). Hence, SOSLE is more efficient in recovering polar analytes than conventional SLE. SOSLE was also compared to classical approaches like solid phase extraction, QuEChERS and ultra-filtration. The proposed technique resulted in extracts of equal or superior cleanliness and with higher average recoveries than those obtained with QuEChERS or SPE. The recovery (median for all compounds) was 73% for QuEChERS, 83% for SPE and 91% for SOSLE. The most significant improvements were observed for polar analytes (penicillines, quinolones and tetracyclines) which are hardly recovered by QuEChERS. The chromatographic separation and detection was based on an ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography Q-Orbitrap system (Q-Exactive plus). The developed analytical method has been validated (based on the commission decision 2002/957/EC) as required for quantitative veterinary drug methods.