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« Previous AbstractDetection of volatile organic compounds in the headspace above mold fungi by GC-soft X-radiation-based APCI-MS    Next AbstractDiscriminative power of chemically sensitive silicon nanowire field effect transistors to volatile organic compounds »

J Mass Spectrom


Title:Characterization of volatile metabolites formed by molds on barley by mass and ion mobility spectrometry
Author(s):Erler A; Riebe D; Beitz T; Lohmannsroben HG; Grothusheitkamp D; Kunz T; Methner FJ;
Address:"Physical Chemistry, University of Potsdam, Karl-Liebknecht-Str. 24-25, 14476 Potsdam, Germany. Department of Food Technology and Food Chemistry, Technische Universitat Berlin, Seestr. 13, 13353 Berlin, Germany"
Journal Title:J Mass Spectrom
Year:2020
Volume:20200304
Issue:5
Page Number:e4501 -
DOI: 10.1002/jms.4501
ISSN/ISBN:1096-9888 (Electronic) 1076-5174 (Linking)
Abstract:"The contamination of barley by molds on the field or in storage leads to the spoilage of grain and the production of mycotoxins, which causes major economic losses in malting facilities and breweries. Therefore, on-site detection of hidden fungus contaminations in grain storages based on the detection of volatile marker compounds is of high interest. In this work, the volatile metabolites of 10 different fungus species are identified by gas chromatography (GC) combined with two complementary mass spectrometric methods, namely, electron impact (EI) and chemical ionization at atmospheric pressure (APCI)-mass spectrometry (MS). The APCI source utilizes soft X-radiation, which enables the selective protonation of the volatile metabolites largely without side reactions. Nearly 80 volatile or semivolatile compounds from different substance classes, namely, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, esters, substituted aromatic compounds, alkenes, terpenes, oxidized terpenes, sesquiterpenes, and oxidized sesquiterpenes, could be identified. The profiles of volatile and semivolatile metabolites of the different fungus species are characteristic of them and allow their safe differentiation. The application of the same GC parameters and APCI source allows a simple method transfer from MS to ion mobility spectrometry (IMS), which permits on-site analyses of grain stores. Characterization of IMS yields limits of detection very similar to those of APCI-MS. Accordingly, more than 90% of the volatile metabolites found by APCI-MS were also detected in IMS. In addition to different fungus genera, different species of one fungus genus could also be differentiated by GC-IMS"
Keywords:Edible Grain/chemistry/*parasitology Food Contamination/analysis Fungi/*chemistry Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry Hordeum/chemistry/*parasitology Ion Mobility Spectrometry Volatile Organic Compounds/*analysis Apci fungus gas chromatography mass spect;
Notes:"MedlineErler, Alexander Riebe, Daniel Beitz, Toralf Lohmannsroben, Hans-Gerd Grothusheitkamp, Daniela Kunz, Thomas Methner, Frank-Jurgen eng 2814801811/Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture/ 2814801811/Federal Office for Agriculture and Food/ England 2020/01/17 J Mass Spectrom. 2020 May; 55(5):e4501. doi: 10.1002/jms.4501. Epub 2020 Mar 4"

 
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