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Dive into the research topics where C. Fente is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Fente.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2000

Application of the assay of aflatoxins by liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection in food analysis

J Jaimez; C. Fente; Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. M. Franco; Alberto Cepeda; G Mahuzier; Patrice Prognon

HPLC using fluorescence detection has already become the most accepted method for the determination of aflatoxins due to its several advantages over other analytical methods. Both normal- and reversed-phase HPLC can be used. However the reversed-phase HPLC methods are more popular. Liquid chromatographic determination of aflatoxins using fluorescence detection and its application in food analysis is reviewed in this article.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2001

Inhibitory effects of eugenol and thymol on Penicillium citrinum strains in culture media and cheese

Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. Fente; C. M. Franco; M.J. Vázquez; Alberto Cepeda

In the present work we studied the antifungal effect of eugenol and thymol on the growth and production of citrinin from Penicillium citrinum (NRRL 2274 and NRRL 2269) in culture media and in different Spanish cheeses (Arzúa-Ulloa, Cebreiro and San Simón). The rate of growth was assessed by measuring colony diameters and the production of citrinin was measured using a rapid semi-quantitative fluorometric technique confirmed by RP-HPLC. A stronger inhibitory effect of eugenol than thymol was evident. 200 microg/ml of eugenol in solid culture medium increased the lag time of growth up to 9 days, and decreased the rate of colony growth. In liquid medium, a complete inhibition of fungal growth was observed. By contrast, thymol in the liquid culture medium only affected the growth rate. In Arzúa-Ulloa cheese, 200 microg/ml of eugenol fully inhibited fungal growth, while in Cebreiro cheese no effect was observed for this compound. Regarding the capacity to inhibit mycotoxin production 100 microg/ml eugenol delayed citrinin production until the sixth day, after which a limiting effect persisted. In Arzúa-Ulloa cheese, no citrinin was detected at a concentration of 150 microg/ml of eugenol, but citrinin was detected after 5 days in the case of thymol at the same concentration. In Cebreiro cheese, neither eugenol nor thymol prevented the production of citrinin at the concentrations applied.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2000

Determination of quinolones in animal tissues and eggs by high-performance liquid chromatography with photodiode-array detection

P.G Gigosos; P.R Revesado; O Cadahı́a; C. Fente; Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. M. Franco; Alberto Cepeda

A rapid, specific reversed-phase HPLC method is described, with solid-phase extraction, for assaying five quinolones (ciprofloxacin, difloxacin, enrofloxacin, norfloxacin and marbofloxacin) with confirmative diode-array detection in samples of bovine kidney, muscle and eggs. The least efficient extraction was marbofloxacin from kidney tissue (64%). The lower detection limit for each quinolone was: enrofloxacin and ciprofloxacin, 1 ng; norfloxacin and difloxacin, 2 ng; marbofloxacin, 4 ng injected. The intra-day relative standard deviations were lower than 7.9% and lower than 8.6% for inter-day assays. These results indicate that the developed method had an acceptable precision.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

New Additive for Culture Media for Rapid Identification of Aflatoxin-Producing Aspergillus Strains

C. Fente; J. Jaimez Ordaz; Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. M. Franco; Alberto Cepeda

ABSTRACT A new reliable, fast, and simple method for the detection of aflatoxigenic Aspergillus strains, consisting of the addition of a cyclodextrin (a methylated β-cyclodextrin derivative) to common media used for testing mycotoxin production ability, was developed. We propose the use of this compound as an additive for fungal culture media to enhance the natural fluorescence of aflatoxins. The production of aflatoxins coincided with the presence of a bright blue or blue-green fluorescent area surrounding colonies when observed under long-wavelength (365-nm) UV light after 3 days of incubation at 28°C. The presence of aflatoxins was confirmed by extracting the medium with chloroform and examining the extracts by high-pressure liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009

Syntheses of molecularly imprinted polymers: Molecular recognition of cyproheptadine using original print molecules and azatadine as dummy templates

Xesús Feás; Julio A. Seijas; M.P. Vázquez-Tato; Patricia Regal; Alberto Cepeda; C. Fente

The use of custom-made polymeric materials with high selectivities as target molecules in solid-phase extraction (SPE), known as molecularly imprinted solid-phase extraction (MISPE), is becoming an increasingly important sample preparation technique. However, the potential risk of leakage of the imprinting molecules during the desorption phase has limited application. The use of a mimicking template, called a dummy molecular imprinting polymer (DMIP), that bears the structure of a related molecule and acts as a putative imprinting molecule may provide a useful solution to this problem. In the current study, cyproheptadine (CPH) and azatadine (AZA) were used as templates in the development of an MIP and DMIP for acrylic acid and methacrylic acid monomers. Our results indicate that DMIPs have equal recognition of CPH, avoiding the problem of leakage of original template during the desorption phase relative to MIPs synthesized in presence of the print molecule CPH. Examination of the surface structure of the two polymer products by SEM shows appreciable differences in structural morphology and function of the monomers employed. These results are well supplemented by data obtained for swelling ratios and solvent uptake. Molecular modelling of CPH and AZA suggests that both substrates are similar in shape and volume.


Journal of Chromatography A | 1996

Simple and sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography-fluorescence method for the determination of citrinin application to the analysis of fungal cultures and cheese extracts☆

C. M. Franco; C. Fente; Beatriz I. Vázquez; Alberto Cepeda; L. Lallaoui; Patrice Prognon; G Mahuzier

A new and highly sensitive method for the detection of the important mycotoxin, citrinin, has been developed. Spectroscopic studies demonstrate that the fluorescence of this metabolite is influenced by the pH of the environment. This fact was exploited in the chromatographic determination of citrinin with fluorescence detection. The proposed method, based on the addition of 1 M hydrochloric acid as an acidic post-column reagent, has a limit of detection of 0.9 center dot 10(-7) M. Analytical validation shows that linearity can be assumed from 2 center dot 10(-7) to 10(-4) M citrinin. The repeatability and reproducibility are satisfactory, with R.S.D. = 5.1% (n = 9, c = 10(-5) M) and R.S.D. = 7.2% (n = 9, c = 10(-5) M). The method was also applied to the determination of this mycotoxin produced by mould cultures isolated from soft cheese and also from soft cheese and also from cheese extracts spiked with citrinin. The specificity of the method is demonstrated and the necessity for post-column acidification is illustrated on real samples.


Journal of Food Protection | 1995

Determination of the Principal Sources of Listeria spp. Contamination in Poultry Meat and a Poultry Processing Plant

C. M. Franco; E. J. Quinto; C. Fente; J. L. Rodriguez-Otero; Lucas Domínguez; Alberto Cepeda

The presence of Listeria spp. in chicken drumsticks, wings, breasts, and livers taken from a poultry processing plant was investigated. The poultry pieces found to be most contaminated were drumstick meat and skin, with 96% of samples shown to contain Listeria spp. Drumsticks contained the highest number of Listeria spp., with counts in many cases exceeding 3 log CFU/g for skin and muscle. Samples were also taken from various surfaces in the processing plant, where the most contaminated areas were found to be in the final stages of meat processing. Three samples were positive for Listeria spp. immediately after washing and disinfection had taken place. The results suggest that drumsticks are responsible for a large amount of the contamination of chicken carcasses, and that the surfaces that come into contact with these pieces of meat play an important role in spreading Listeria spp. Disinfection procedures used by this processing plant do not effectively control Listeria spp.


Journal of Chromatography A | 1996

Simultaneous high-performance liquid chromatographic determination of ochratoxin A and citrinin in cheese by time-resolved luminescence using terbium

Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. Fente; C. M. Franco; Alberto Cepeda; Patrice Prognon; Georges Mahuzier

Abstract A simultaneous reversed-phase HPLC determination of two major mycotoxins, ochratoxin A and citrinin, in soft cheese is proposed. Both mycotoxins are eluted on a C18 RP support (25 × 4.6 mm I.D.) using an isocratic eluent consisting of methanol-water (70:30, v/v) containing tetrabutylammonium hydroxide (10−3 M), acidified to pH 5.5 with HCl, and pumped at a flow-rate of 0.8 ml/min. Prior to detection, a butanolic solution of 5·10−3 M terbium-5 · 10−4 M trioctylphosphine oxide (TOPO)-2.5 · 10−2 M triethylamine (TEA) was pumped in a postcolumn mode at a flow-rate of 0.2 ml/min to perform time-resolved luminescence (TRL) detection of the corresponding terbium chelates (λex = 331 nm/λem = 545 nm). The method is linear from 3.5·10−6 to 2·10−5 M for citrinin and from 1·10−5 to 5·10−5 M for ochratoxin A. The repeatability and reproducibility (R.S.D.) are 1.9 and 2.4% for citrinin (c = 3.5·10−6 M; n = 10), and 7.2 and 8.3% for ochratoxin A (c = 1.0·10−5 M; n = 10). The limits of detection, for a signal-to-background ratio of 3, are 2·10−6 and 3·10−6 M for citrinin and ochratoxin A, respectively. With the proposed method, ochratoxin A and citrin are easily determined in soft cheeses, with a significative increase in selectivity in comparison with direct fluorescence detection.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2009

Quantitative LC-MS/MS method for the sensitive and simultaneous determination of natural hormones in bovine serum

Patricia Regal; Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. M. Franco; Alberto Cepeda; C. Fente

We have developed a liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometric (LC-MS/MS) method for the simultaneous quantitative analysis of several free forms of steroid hormones in bovine serum [pregnenolone (P(5)), progesterone (P(4)), 17hydroxyP(5), 17hydroxyP(4), testosterone (T), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), androstenedione (A), estrone (E(1)), 2, 4 and 16 hydroxyE(1), 2 and 4 methoxyE(1)]. Deuterated analogs were used as internal standards. Serum proteins were eliminated with acetonitrile. Oxime derivatives of steroids were extracted with tert-butylmethylether and analyzed in positive MRM mode. Methodology was validated in accordance with the European Commission Decision 2002/657/EC. Performance characteristics permit the use of this methodology for steroid determination in animal serum samples.


Poultry Science | 2008

Evolution of Resistance in Poultry Intestinal Escherichia coli During Three Commonly Used Antimicrobial Therapeutic Treatments in Poultry

José M. Miranda; Beatriz I. Vázquez; C. Fente; Jorge Barros-Velázquez; Alberto Cepeda; C. M. Franco

The resistance rates of intestinal Escherichia coli populations from poultry were determined during treatment and withdrawal period with 3 antimicrobial agents commonly used as therapeutics in poultry medicine. A total of 108 chickens were considered: 18 were treated orally with enrofloxacin, 18 with doxycycline, and 18 with sulfonamides, whereas another 18 chickens were maintained as controls for each antimicrobial group. Fecal samples were taken during the treatment and after the withdrawal period, and E. coli were isolated through Fluorocult media plating. A total of 648 E. coli strains (216 per antimicrobial tested) were isolated and identified though biochemical methods. Minimal inhibitory concentrations to the antimicrobials used were also determined using a broth microdilution method. The resistance rates of intestinal E. coli to all of the antimicrobials tested significantly increased during the course of the therapeutic treatment. In addition, significant differences (P = 0.0136) in resistance rates persisted between the intestinal E. coli of the enrofloxacin-treated and control batches until the end of the withdrawal period, but this difference was not observed for the cases of doxycycline or sulfonamides treatments. Antimicrobial use in poultry medicine seems to select for antimicrobial-resistant strains of pathogenic bacterial species such as E. coli. In some cases, the higher frequencies of resistant strains may persist in the avian intestinal tract until the end of the withdrawal period, when it is legal to use these animals for human consumption.

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Alberto Cepeda

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Beatriz I. Vázquez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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C. M. Franco

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Patricia Regal

University of Santiago de Compostela

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José M. Miranda

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Carolina Nebot

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Xesús Feás

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Rocío Barreiro

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Jorge Barros-Velázquez

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Mónica Díaz-Bao

University of Santiago de Compostela

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