- Implication of brevetoxin B1 and PbTx-3 in neurotoxic shellfish poisoning in New Zealand by isolation and quantitative determination with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Implication of brevetoxin B1 and PbTx-3 in neurotoxic shellfish poisoning in New Zealand by isolation and quantitative determination with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry.
Brevetoxin B1 (BTX-B1) was isolated from Austrovenus stutchburyi following the 1992-1993 outbreak of neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP) in New Zealand. We report here the first isolation of PbTx-3 from the same shellfish and the development of a procedure for quantitative determination of PbTx-3 and BTX-B1. PbTx-3 was isolated by chromatography on columns of SiO2, ODS, and LH-20, followed by reverse-phase HPLCs. In mass spectrometry (MS) with an electrospray ionization (ESI) interface operating in the positive or negative ion mode, the abundant protonated ion [M+H]+ of PbTx-3 (m/z 897) and the de-sodiated ion [M-Na]- of BTX-B1 (m/z 1016) were generated, respectively. These served as precursor ions for collision-induced dissociation, and the product ions of m/z 725 from PbTx-3 and m/z 80 from BTX-B1 were identified, allowing unambiguous confirmation of these toxins by selected reaction monitoring liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (SRM LC-MS/MS) analysis. The determination limits were 0.4 and 2 ng/g for BTX-B1 and PbTx-3 at a signal-to-noise ratio of five, respectively. This LC-MS/MS method was successfully applied to determine BTX-B1 and PbTx-3 in the NSP-associated toxic shellfish. BTX-B1 was found in both A. stutchburyi and Perna canaliculus, but not in Crassostrea gigas, while PbTx-3 was found in all three.