Targeted and Sensitive Detection of Food Allergens in Complex and Processed Foodstuffs Using UPLC-MS/MS
Applications | 2017 | WatersInstrumentation
Food allergies pose a serious health risk worldwide and require absolute exclusion of allergenic proteins from the diet. Accurate detection methods are critical to enforce labeling regulations and protect sensitive consumers.
This study presents a targeted, sensitive multi-allergen screening method for milk, egg, peanut, and soybean proteins in processed and complex food matrices. The method aims to meet VITAL reference doses and AOAC SMPR 2016.002 performance criteria using UPLC-MS/MS.
A unified sample preparation protocol was applied to chocolate, ice cream, tomato sauce, and cookies. Proteins were extracted, reduced, alkylated, and digested with trypsin. Six representative peptides per allergen were selected based on in silico digestion and structural relevance. Chromatographic separation used a water/acetonitrile gradient with 0.1% formic acid at 0.2 mL/min and column temperature of 40 °C. MS detection employed positive electrospray ionization in multiple reaction monitoring mode. Optimized cone voltages, collision energies, and desolvation settings ensured high sensitivity.
The method monitored 23 peptides and 69 transitions. Limits of quantification in cookies (worst case) were 0.5 mg casein/kg, 5 mg whey/kg, 3.4 mg egg white/kg, 30.8 mg egg yolk/kg, 2.5 mg peanut/kg, and 5 mg soybean/kg. Signal-to-noise ratios exceeded 10 for all primary transitions at LOQ. Calibration in incurred and processed matrices showed linearity (R² > 0.99) without internal standards, although matrix effects varied by peptide and process type.
The assay delivers robust, multiplexed quantitation of key food allergens in complex and thermally processed products. It supports compliance monitoring, quality assurance, and risk assessment in food manufacturing and regulatory testing laboratories.
This UPLC-MS/MS method achieves the lowest reported LOQs for milk, egg, peanut, and soybean proteins in complex foods, fulfilling current VITAL and AOAC SMPR requirements. It offers a powerful tool for sensitive and reliable allergen surveillance.
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Food allergies pose a serious health risk worldwide and require absolute exclusion of allergenic proteins from the diet. Accurate detection methods are critical to enforce labeling regulations and protect sensitive consumers.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study presents a targeted, sensitive multi-allergen screening method for milk, egg, peanut, and soybean proteins in processed and complex food matrices. The method aims to meet VITAL reference doses and AOAC SMPR 2016.002 performance criteria using UPLC-MS/MS.
Used Instrumentation
- Waters ACQUITY UPLC System
- ACQUITY UPLC BEH130 BEH Column (2.1×150 mm, 1.7 µm)
- Waters Xevo TQ-S triple quadrupole mass spectrometer
- MassLynx MS acquisition software
- Skyline software for in silico digestion and MRM design
- UniProt protein database
Methodology
A unified sample preparation protocol was applied to chocolate, ice cream, tomato sauce, and cookies. Proteins were extracted, reduced, alkylated, and digested with trypsin. Six representative peptides per allergen were selected based on in silico digestion and structural relevance. Chromatographic separation used a water/acetonitrile gradient with 0.1% formic acid at 0.2 mL/min and column temperature of 40 °C. MS detection employed positive electrospray ionization in multiple reaction monitoring mode. Optimized cone voltages, collision energies, and desolvation settings ensured high sensitivity.
Main Results and Discussion
The method monitored 23 peptides and 69 transitions. Limits of quantification in cookies (worst case) were 0.5 mg casein/kg, 5 mg whey/kg, 3.4 mg egg white/kg, 30.8 mg egg yolk/kg, 2.5 mg peanut/kg, and 5 mg soybean/kg. Signal-to-noise ratios exceeded 10 for all primary transitions at LOQ. Calibration in incurred and processed matrices showed linearity (R² > 0.99) without internal standards, although matrix effects varied by peptide and process type.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The assay delivers robust, multiplexed quantitation of key food allergens in complex and thermally processed products. It supports compliance monitoring, quality assurance, and risk assessment in food manufacturing and regulatory testing laboratories.
Future Trends and Opportunities
- Integration of isotopically labeled peptide standards for absolute quantitation
- Expansion to additional allergens and broader food matrices
- Automation of data processing workflows and real-time monitoring
- Adoption of high-resolution mass spectrometry for enhanced specificity
- Alignment with evolving regulatory thresholds and interlaboratory validation
Conclusion
This UPLC-MS/MS method achieves the lowest reported LOQs for milk, egg, peanut, and soybean proteins in complex foods, fulfilling current VITAL and AOAC SMPR requirements. It offers a powerful tool for sensitive and reliable allergen surveillance.
References
- AOAC SMPR 2016.002 Standard Method Performance Requirements for Detection and Quantitation of Selected Food Allergens.
- VITAL Reference Doses and Action Levels for Food Allergens.
- Planque et al. Advances in UPLC-MS/MS for Sensitive Detection of Food Allergens in Complex Matrices. J Chromatogr A. 1464:115–123, 2016.
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