4.8 Article

Exposomic Biomonitoring of Polyphenols by Non-Targeted Analysis and Suspect Screening

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 28, Pages 10686-10694

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.3c01393

Keywords

-

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Polyphenols, abundant in plants and fungi, have beneficial bioactive properties. High-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) is favored for analyzing their complexity. This study evaluated the advantages of HRMS, using untargeted techniques and online resources, for annotating polyphenols and other molecules. Despite the sensitivity loss compared to low-resolution mass spectrometry (LRMS), HRMS is capable of comprehensively investigating human polyphenol exposure, linking it to human health effects and toxicological mixture effects with other xenobiotics.
Polyphenols, prevalentin plants and fungi, are investigated intensivelyin nutritional and clinical settings because of their beneficial bioactiveproperties. Due to their complexity, analysis with untargeted approachesis favorable, which typically use high-resolution mass spectrometry(HRMS) rather than low-resolution mass spectrometry (LRMS). Here,the advantages of HRMS were evaluated by thoroughly testing untargetedtechniques and available online resources. By applying data-dependentacquisition on real-life urine samples, 27 features were annotatedwith spectral libraries, 88 with in silico fragmentation,and 113 by MS1 matching with PhytoHub, an online databasecontaining >2000 polyphenols. Moreover, other exogenous and endogenousmolecules were screened to measure chemical exposure and potentialmetabolic effects using the Exposome-Explorer database, further annotating144 features. Additional polyphenol-related features were exploredusing various non-targeted analysis techniques including MassQL forglucuronide and sulfate neutral losses, and MetaboAnalyst for statisticalanalysis. As HRMS typically suffers a sensitivity loss compared tostate-of-the-art LRMS used in targeted workflows, the gap betweenthe two instrumental approaches was quantified in three spiked humanmatrices (urine, serum, plasma) as well as real-life urine samples.Both instruments showed feasible sensitivity, with median limits ofdetection in the spiked samples being 10-18 ng/mL for HRMSand 4.8-5.8 ng/mL for LRMS. The results demonstrate that, despiteits intrinsic limitations, HRMS can readily be used for comprehensivelyinvestigating human polyphenol exposure. In the future, this workis expected to allow for linking human health effects with exposurepatterns and toxicological mixture effects with other xenobiotics.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available