Affiliation:
1. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, London Research and Development Centre, London N5V 4T3, ON, Canada
2. Carleton University, Department of Chemistry, Ottawa K1S 5B6, ON, Canada
Abstract
Mycotoxins are one of the great global challenges to agri-food and feed safety. Industry requires fast, reliable, and economical testing methods for the most important regulated mycotoxins to manage this problem. Climate change and changes in agricultural practice are complicating this
situation, triggering the movement of some mycotoxins into new regions, which are unprepared for their management. Modern LC–tandem MS (LC–MS/MS) instruments have addressed this analytical challenge, but such instruments are expensive and require highly qualified personnel and
dedicated facilities. As a result of these limitations, traditional LC–MS/MS is not amenable for use on farms or at small to midsized processing facilities, such as a grain elevator. To address the need for on-site rapid testing, the mycotoxin community has focused on antibody-based
and spectrophotometric approaches. The development of innovative technologies such as miniaturized MS would allow for the acquisition of more information on mixtures of toxins present in a sample at costs comparable to those of the existing rapid methods such as ELISA. The capital costs are
higher, but it would reduce per-sample testing costs and time requirements and provide better value for money while maintaining the accuracy and selectivity achieved in a laboratory setting. In this article, we review the available techniques and contrast them in the context of three main
criteria: method performance, speed of analysis, and cost. We define the integration of these three parameters as the “mycotoxin testing paradigm.”
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Pharmacology,Agronomy and Crop Science,Environmental Chemistry,Food Science,Analytical Chemistry
Cited by
17 articles.
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