1. Surface plasmon resonance biosensor for the determination of 3-methyl-quinoxaline-2-carboxylic acid, the marker residue of olaquindox, in swine tissues.
- Author
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Peng D, Kavanagh O, Gao H, Zhang X, Deng S, Chen D, Liu Z, Xie C, Situ C, and Yuan Z
- Subjects
- Animals, Limit of Detection, Liver chemistry, Muscles chemistry, Reproducibility of Results, Swine, Drug Residues metabolism, Quinoxalines analysis, Quinoxalines metabolism, Surface Plasmon Resonance
- Abstract
To monitor the illegal use of olaquindox in animals, a monoclonal antibody-based surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor method has been developed to detect 3-methyl-quinoxaline-2-carboxylic acid, the marker residues of olaquindox, in swine tissues. The limit of detection was 1.4 µg kg
-1 in swine muscle and 2.7 µg kg-1 in swine liver, which are lower than the EU recommended concentration (10 µg kg-1 ). The recoveries were from 82% to 104.6%, with coefficients of variation of less than 12.2%. Good correlations between SPR and HPLC results (r = 0.9806, muscle; r = 0.9698, liver) and between SPR and ic-ELISA results (r = 0.9918, muscle; r = 0.9873, liver) were observed in the affected tissues, which demonstrated the reliability of the SPR method. This method would be a rapid and reliable tool for the screening of the residues of olaquindox in the edible tissues of animals., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2020
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