Time dependence of the pre-chromatographic oxidation method for bivalves contaminated with paralytic shellfish poisoning toxins.

Food Addit Contam Part A Chem Anal Control Expo Risk Assess

Sea and Marine Resources Department (DMRM), The Portuguese Sea and Atmosphere Institute, I.P. (IPMA, IP), Algés, Portugal.

Published: March 2025

The neurotoxins of the saxitoxin family can be the origin of the human neurological syndrome of paralytic shellfish poisoning via contaminated marine bivalve vectors. A pre-chromatographic oxidation method is the official testing method in the EU, also known as the 'Lawrence method'. It involves several steps, including toxin extraction, solid-phase clean-up, and oxidation to produce fluorescent derivatives. Despite the manual peroxide oxidation involving four pipetting steps, high coefficients of determination were commonly obtained for the calibration curves of the respective toxin oxidation products. However, the 11-hydroxysulphate toxins dcGTX2 + 3, C1 + 2 and GTX2 + 3, often had slightly lower coefficients of determination (i.e.  < 0.998) than their non-11-hydroxysulphate counterparts dcSTX, GTX5 and STX (i.e.  > 0.998). Deviations of ±10 s from the respective standard reaction times, caused significant alterations in fluorescent yield for toxins quantified with peroxide but not for those quantified with periodate. The oxidation is an endothermal reaction, and its reaction rate is toxin-specific, with the N11-hydroxysulphate toxins having a slower reaction rate. This was confirmed by incubating GTX2 + 3 and STX at different reaction times. The incubation of toxins in a bivalve matrix also slows down the reaction in comparison with oxidation in dilute acetic acid, giving lower recoveries, as studied here in detail for dcGTX2 + 3. Circumventing the matrix effect by dilution is not possible, as 10% of matrix is enough to cause a reduction to half of the fluorescence yield of dcGTX2 + 3. When heating the N1-H toxins with peroxide, the increase in fluorescence yield is inversely proportional to the recovery values commonly found for each toxin.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19440049.2025.2472360DOI Listing

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