The zucchini (Cucurbita pepo) cultivars 'Patty Green', 'Black Beauty', and 'Gold Rush' were cultivated on weathered dioxin-contaminated soil in pots, and concentrations of the 29 dioxin-like compounds that were assigned WHO-TEFs, three non-toxic polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins/dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs), and two non-dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were analyzed. Toxic equivalent (TEQ) values accumulated in 'Black Beauty' and 'Gold Rush' were about 180 times higher than those in 'Patty Green'. The bioconcentration factor (BCF) based on total mass concentration of the twelve dioxin-like PCBs was higher than those of the seven PCDDs and ten PCDFs in all the cultivars. The BCFs for PCDD and PCDF congeners were negatively correlated with octanol-water partition coefficients in all the plants. No correlations were observed in PCB congeners in the high accumulators, although in 'Patty Green' the BCFs for PCB congeners were significantly correlated with octanol-water partition coefficients. Our findings suggest that the high accumulators had unknown, unique mechanisms for uptake of PCBs, whereas PCDDs and PCDFs were absorbed based on their physicochemical properties.
Effective sample pretreatment procedures based on solid-phase extraction (SPE) for multiresidue
determination of seven neonicotinoid insecticides in agricultural products were investigated. After
extraction with acetone and concentration, the insecticides in aqueous sample extracts were
transferred into organic solvent phases with a Chem Elut SPE cartridge. Finally, the eluate from the
cartridge was cleaned up with a SPE cartridge packed with graphitized carbon black and aminopropyl
silica gel, which showed a higher cleanup efficiency than the classical silica gel SPE cartridge. Seven
insecticides were separated on a reversed-phase C18 column and a gradient system of methanol
and phosphate solution based on high-performance liquid chromatography. The established
multiresidue determination has been applied to several artificially spiked agricultural samples, with
the result that the average recoveries were excellent, with the exception of nitenpyram. The limit of
detection of the method ranged from 0.01 to 0.03 mg/kg for the insecticides.
Keywords: Neonicotinoid insecticides; pesticide residue analysis; solid-phase extraction (SPE); HPLC;
diode-array detection; agricultural products
The performance of a commercially available microtiter plate ELISA kit for the determination of the neonicotinoid insecticide imidacloprid was evaluated for sensitivity, selectivity, influence of organic solvent used for extraction procedure, matrix interference originated from agricultural sample, accuracy, and method comparison with conventional HPLC analysis. The limit of detection for the kit (0.1 or 0.5 ng/mL) was determined. The working range (1-39 ng/mL) experimentally calculated on the basis of a criterion, which is determined as the range from I(20) to I(80), was comparable to that established by the manufacturer (1-50 ng/mL). The linearity of the standard curve based on the kit-assembled standard solutions agreed with the one based on the self-made standard solutions. Specificity studies indicate that the imidacloprid monoclonal antibody can readily distinguish the target compound from other structurally related neonicotinoid analogues and some metabolites, with the exception of clothianidin, the cross-reactivity of which was approximately 12%. To extract imidacloprid from an agricultural sample (apple) as simply and rapidly as possible, some extraction methods were examined. Consequently, the extraction method with hand-shaking for 5 min was the best among the examined methods. For the analysis of imidacloprid in apple samples, it was extracted directly with methanol and the extracts were diluted 10-fold (100-fold in the well) with water prior to ELISA analysis. No significant matrix interference was observed with the dilution factor. Recoveries of imidacloprid from fortified apple samples ranged from 87.7 to 112.0%. The results obtained with the ELISA kit correlated well with those by the reference method (conventional HPLC analysis) for apple samples (r > 0.998). These findings strongly indicate that the ELISA kit may be employed routinely for an on-site imidacloprid residue analysis of apple samples.
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