The Analysis of Cyanotoxins, Including Microcystins, in Drinking and Surface Waters by Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry
Applications | 2017 | WatersInstrumentation
Cyanobacterial toxins pose a growing threat to drinking and recreational waters due to intensifying algal blooms fueled by phosphorus and nitrogen pollution. Among these toxins, microcystins are the most prevalent and potent, affecting liver function in humans and animals. Reliable detection at sub-ppb levels is essential to meet World Health Organization guideline values and national regulations, and to avoid false positives associated with immunoassays.
This application note presents a streamlined UPLC-MS/MS method for simultaneous quantification of ten key cyanotoxins, including cylindrospermopsin anatoxin-a nodularin and eight microcystin variants, in untreated surface and drinking waters. The goals are to achieve rapid analysis without sample preparation and to demonstrate accuracy using standard addition to compensate for matrix effects.
The method enables water testing laboratories to rapidly screen multiple cyanotoxins without costly internal standards or sample cleanup. Automated standard addition corrects for matrix effects, making it suitable for both compliance monitoring and proficiency testing.
Expansion of isotope-labeled standards may improve quantitative accuracy. Coupling with online enrichment or high-resolution MS could enhance sensitivity for emerging toxins. Integration into routine water quality networks and remote monitoring stations will support real-time risk assessment.
The described UPLC-MS/MS protocol delivers fast, sensitive, and robust quantification of ten cyanotoxins in raw water matrices. Direct injection and automated standard addition overcome preparation and matrix challenges, meeting regulatory requirements with minimal instrument downtime.
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Cyanobacterial toxins pose a growing threat to drinking and recreational waters due to intensifying algal blooms fueled by phosphorus and nitrogen pollution. Among these toxins, microcystins are the most prevalent and potent, affecting liver function in humans and animals. Reliable detection at sub-ppb levels is essential to meet World Health Organization guideline values and national regulations, and to avoid false positives associated with immunoassays.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note presents a streamlined UPLC-MS/MS method for simultaneous quantification of ten key cyanotoxins, including cylindrospermopsin anatoxin-a nodularin and eight microcystin variants, in untreated surface and drinking waters. The goals are to achieve rapid analysis without sample preparation and to demonstrate accuracy using standard addition to compensate for matrix effects.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- Direct injection of 50 μL water samples on a Waters ACQUITY UPLC I-Class system with BEH C18 column
- Gradient elution over 7.5 minutes at 0.4 mL/min using 0.1% formic acid and acetonitrile
- Detection by Xevo TQ-S tandem quadrupole MS with electrospray ionization in positive mode
- MRM transitions optimized by IntelliStart and processed via TargetLynx XS
Main Results and Discussion
- All toxins eluted within a 6-minute window, with no interferences in blank matrices
- Sensitivity down to 25 ng/L, well below the 1 μg/L provisional guideline for microcystin-LR
- Linearity across 10 to 1000 ng/L with r2 greater than 0.99 and residuals under 20%
- Repeatability under 5% RSD for peak areas over 15 hours
- Matrix suppression observed in direct external calibration; resolved by automated standard addition
Practical Benefits and Applications
The method enables water testing laboratories to rapidly screen multiple cyanotoxins without costly internal standards or sample cleanup. Automated standard addition corrects for matrix effects, making it suitable for both compliance monitoring and proficiency testing.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Expansion of isotope-labeled standards may improve quantitative accuracy. Coupling with online enrichment or high-resolution MS could enhance sensitivity for emerging toxins. Integration into routine water quality networks and remote monitoring stations will support real-time risk assessment.
Conclusion
The described UPLC-MS/MS protocol delivers fast, sensitive, and robust quantification of ten cyanotoxins in raw water matrices. Direct injection and automated standard addition overcome preparation and matrix challenges, meeting regulatory requirements with minimal instrument downtime.
Reference
- Schmidt JR Wilhelm SW Boyer GL The fate of microcystins in the environment and challenges for monitoring Toxins 2014 6 3354–3387
- Testai E Buratti FM Funari E et al Review and analysis of occurrence exposure and toxicity of cyanobacteria toxins in food EFSA Supporting Publication 2016 13 2 EN-998
- WHO Cyanobacterial toxins Microcystin-LR in drinking water Background document for WHO Guidelines for drinking water quality 2003 WHO SDE WSH 03.04.57
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