Characterization of moenomycin antibiotics from medicated chicken feed by ion-trap mass spectrometry with electrospray ionization |
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Authors: | Eichhorn Peter Aga Diana S |
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Affiliation: | The State University of New York at Buffalo, Chemistry Department, 611 Natural Science Complex, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA. |
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Abstract: | The antimicrobial moenomycin, commonly used as a growth promoter in livestock, was isolated from medicated chicken feed. The purified extract was subjected to reversed-phase liquid chromatographic separation followed by structural characterization using ion-trap mass spectrometry (ITMS), which allowed identification of five moenomycins (A, A12, C1, C3, and C4) as the major components. The fragmentation patterns of the protonated and deprotonated moenomycin molecules, as well as of a series of sodium adducts, were investigated using ITMS after electrospray ionization. While the protonated molecules [M+H]+ proved highly unstable and underwent extensive in-source fragmentation, isolation and activation of the [M--H]- ions (m/z 1580 for moenomycin-A) yielded simple mass spectra with a dominant base peak corresponding to the loss of the carboxy-glycol and the C25-hydrocarbon chain (m/z 1152 for moenomycin-A). Further study of this fragment ion in an MS3 experiment gave rise to a peculiar product ion (m/z 902 for moenomycin-A) that was attributed to the expulsion of a carbohydrate moiety representing a central building block of the linear molecule. In positive ion mode the generation of the mono-sodiated adduct ions, [M+Na]+, was promoted by amending the mobile phase with 100 microM sodium acetate, but this also resulted in higher adducts of the type [M+2Na--H]+ and [M+3Na--2H]+ arising from the formation of the sodium salts of the phosphate acid diester and subsequently of the carboxylic acid. Substantial differences among the fragment-rich product ion profiles of the three species were observed, and could in part be traced back to the mode of complexation of the additional sodium cation(s). |
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