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Intact glucosinolate analysis in plant extracts by programmed cone voltage electrospray LC/MS: performance and comparison with LC/MS/MS methods.
Anal Biochem. 2002 Jul 01; 306(1):83-91.AB

Abstract

We present a comprehensive, sensitive, and highly specific negative ion electrospray LC/MS method for identifying all structural classes of glucosinolates in crude plant extracts. The technique is based on the observation of simultaneous maxima in the abundances of the m/z 96 and 97 ions, generated by programmed cone voltage fragmentation, in the mass chromatogram. The abundance ratios lie in the range 1:2-1:4 ([m/z 96]/[m/z 97]). Examination of the corresponding full-scan mass spectra allows individual glucosinolates of all structural classes to be identified rapidly and with confidence. The use of linearly programmed cone voltage fragmentation enhances characteristic fragment ions without compromising the abundance of the analytically important [M - H]- ion and its associated (and analytically useful) sulfur isotope peaks. Detection limits are in the low nanogram range for full-scan, programmed cone voltage spectra. Comparison of the technique with LC/MS/MS methods (product ion, precursor ion, and constant neutral loss scans) has shown that the sensitivity and selectivity of the programmed cone voltage method is superior. Data obtained on a variety of plant extracts confirmed that the methodology was robust and reliable.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Food Research, Norwich Research Park, Colney, Norwich, United Kingdom. fred.mellon@bbsrc.ac.ukNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

12069418

Citation

Mellon, Fred A., et al. "Intact Glucosinolate Analysis in Plant Extracts By Programmed Cone Voltage Electrospray LC/MS: Performance and Comparison With LC/MS/MS Methods." Analytical Biochemistry, vol. 306, no. 1, 2002, pp. 83-91.
Mellon FA, Bennett RN, Holst B, et al. Intact glucosinolate analysis in plant extracts by programmed cone voltage electrospray LC/MS: performance and comparison with LC/MS/MS methods. Anal Biochem. 2002;306(1):83-91.
Mellon, F. A., Bennett, R. N., Holst, B., & Williamson, G. (2002). Intact glucosinolate analysis in plant extracts by programmed cone voltage electrospray LC/MS: performance and comparison with LC/MS/MS methods. Analytical Biochemistry, 306(1), 83-91.
Mellon FA, et al. Intact Glucosinolate Analysis in Plant Extracts By Programmed Cone Voltage Electrospray LC/MS: Performance and Comparison With LC/MS/MS Methods. Anal Biochem. 2002 Jul 1;306(1):83-91. PubMed PMID: 12069418.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Intact glucosinolate analysis in plant extracts by programmed cone voltage electrospray LC/MS: performance and comparison with LC/MS/MS methods. AU - Mellon,Fred A, AU - Bennett,Richard N, AU - Holst,Birgit, AU - Williamson,Gary, PY - 2002/6/19/pubmed PY - 2003/2/6/medline PY - 2002/6/19/entrez SP - 83 EP - 91 JF - Analytical biochemistry JO - Anal Biochem VL - 306 IS - 1 N2 - We present a comprehensive, sensitive, and highly specific negative ion electrospray LC/MS method for identifying all structural classes of glucosinolates in crude plant extracts. The technique is based on the observation of simultaneous maxima in the abundances of the m/z 96 and 97 ions, generated by programmed cone voltage fragmentation, in the mass chromatogram. The abundance ratios lie in the range 1:2-1:4 ([m/z 96]/[m/z 97]). Examination of the corresponding full-scan mass spectra allows individual glucosinolates of all structural classes to be identified rapidly and with confidence. The use of linearly programmed cone voltage fragmentation enhances characteristic fragment ions without compromising the abundance of the analytically important [M - H]- ion and its associated (and analytically useful) sulfur isotope peaks. Detection limits are in the low nanogram range for full-scan, programmed cone voltage spectra. Comparison of the technique with LC/MS/MS methods (product ion, precursor ion, and constant neutral loss scans) has shown that the sensitivity and selectivity of the programmed cone voltage method is superior. Data obtained on a variety of plant extracts confirmed that the methodology was robust and reliable. SN - 0003-2697 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/12069418/Intact_glucosinolate_analysis_in_plant_extracts_by_programmed_cone_voltage_electrospray_LC/MS:_performance_and_comparison_with_LC/MS/MS_methods_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0003269702956770 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -