AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on developing a screening method to detect cereulide, a toxin from Bacillus cereus, in fried rice, which is important for identifying food poisoning cases even when the bacteria itself may not be found.
  • The researchers used the QuEChERS extraction method along with LC-MS/MS to identify and quantify cereulide, achieving accuracy levels between 88% and 89%, and establishing a limit of quantification at 2 µg/kg.
  • Results indicated that the method effectively removed interfering compounds and provided reliable quantification, meeting Japanese validation guidelines, thus showing potential as a dependable tool for checking fried rice for cereulide contamination.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The presence of cereulide, an emetic toxin produced by Bacillus cereus, in fried rice samples is critical evidence of food poisoning even in situations where B. cereus could not be detected. This study aims to develop a screening method for analyzing cereulide in fried rice using the QuEChERS procedure and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS).

Methods: Cereulide was identified and quantified in fried rice samples using the QuEChERS extraction method and LC-MS/MS. The accuracies of the methods were determined by analyzing fortified blank samples at two concentrations (10 and 50 µg/kg) conducted on three samples daily for five days.

Results: The QuEChERS procedure removed matrix compounds from fried rice. Characteristic MS/MS spectra enabled the identification of cereulide. As the matrix effects in seven fried rice samples were within ± 6%, an external solvent calibration curve could be used for quantification. This method exhibited good accuracy ranging from 88 to 89%. The relative standard deviations for both repeatability and intra-laboratory reproducibility were < 4%. These standard deviations satisfied the criteria of the Japanese validation guidelines for residues (MHLW 2010, Director Notice, Syoku-An No. 1224-1). The limit of quantification was 2 μg/kg. The applicability of this method was confirmed using the analysis of cereulide in fried rice samples incubated with emetic Bacillus cereus.

Conclusions: The QuEChERS extraction procedure described herein showed substantial promise as a reliable screening tool for cereulide in fried rice sample.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11269499PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11419-024-00683-3DOI Listing

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