A Universal Method for the Simultaneous Determination
of Environmental Pollutants in Marine Biological Samples: Per- and
Polyfluoroalkyl Substances and Antibiotics as a Case Study
posted on 2024-12-27, 02:46authored byDi Fang, Ge Yang, Bentuo Xu, Jialin Li, Jiayi Lin, Chunmiao Zheng, Jason T. Magnuson, Wenhui Qiu
Conventional detection technologies
for environmental contaminants
have primarily focused on providing accurate qualitative and quantitative
evaluations for single pollutant types, leading to increased costs
and an inability to satisfy the growing demand for detecting a broader
spectrum of pollutants. Here, we introduced a novel analytical method
to simultaneously measure the concentration levels of diverse environmental
pollutants, characterized by their distinct properties, across complex
biological samples. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and
antibiotics were used as a case study due to their frequency of detection
in the environment and known impacts Our method harnesses the salting-out
effect of sodium chloride on proteins within the muscle tissues of
178 marine species, which significantly reduces the addition of extraneous
substances, mitigates matrix interference, and avoids reliance on
solid-phase extraction or dispersive extraction agents. The method
provides a simultaneous pretreatment for the detection of several
compounds, with detection limits from 0.002 to 0.41 ng/g dry weight,
which are substantially lower than conventional methods. Overall,
this method streamlines efficiency, decreases costs, lessens matrix
effects, and sets a solid groundwork for future applications in the
concurrent detection of a broader spectrum of environmentally pertinent
pollutants with varied characteristics.