4.6 Article

Characterization and Quantification of Arsenic Species in Foodstuffs of Plant Origin by HPLC/ICP-MS

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life13020511

Keywords

arsenic; HPLC; ICP-MS; speciation; plant-based foods; infant foods; hazard identification

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Arsenic is a well-known carcinogenic and toxic element that is present in the environment in both inorganic and organic forms. The identification and determination of arsenic species are important due to the varying toxicity of these compounds. A sensitive and optimized method using HPLC/ICP-MS was developed for the determination of inorganic arsenic and relevant organic arsenic compounds. The method was validated and successfully applied to various food matrices, revealing significant concentrations of arsenic in seaweed, rice, cereals, legumes, and plant-based foods for infants and young children. These findings contribute to the assessment of overall arsenic exposure and the establishment of maximum limits.
Arsenic is a well-known carcinogenic, mutagenic and toxic element and occurs in the environment both as inorganic arsenic (iAs) and organoarsenical compounds (oAsCs). Since the toxicity of arsenic compounds depends on their chemical form, the identification and determination of arsenic species are essential. Recently, the European Food Safety Authority, following the European Commission request, published a report on chronic dietary exposure to iAs and recommended the development and validation of analytical methods with adequate sensitivity and refined extraction procedures for this determination. Moreover, the authority called upon new arsenic speciation data for complex food matrices such as seaweeds, grains and grain-based products. Looking at this context, an optimized, sensitive and fast analytical method using high performance liquid chromatography followed by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (HPLC/ICP-MS) was developed for the determination of iAs (sum of arsenite-As-III and arsenate-As-V) and the most relevant oAsCs, arsenobetaine, dimethylarsinic acid and monomethylarsonic acid. The method was validated with satisfactory results in terms of linearity, sensitivity, selectivity, precision, recovery, uncertainty, ruggedness and matrix effect, and then successfully applied for the analysis of several matrices, i.e., processed and unprocessed cereal and cereal products, fruits, vegetables, legumes, seaweeds, nuts and seeds. The results obtained indicate that not only seaweed and rice matrices but also many cereals, legumes and plant-based foods for infants and young children contain significant concentrations of iAs and oAsCs. These findings contribute to the data collection necessary to assess the role of these matrices in the total arsenic exposure and if specific maximum limits have to be established.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available