Nontargeted Screening of Food Matrices: Development of a

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Non-Targeted Screening of Food Matrices: Development of a Chemometric Software Strategy to Identify Unknowns in Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry Data Ann M. Knolhoff, Jerry A Zweigenbaum, and Timothy R Croley Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.5b04208 • Publication Date (Web): 03 Mar 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 6, 2016

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Analytical Chemistry

Non-Targeted Screening of Food Matrices: Development of a Chemometric Software Strategy to Identify Unknowns in Liquid Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry Data

Ann M. Knolhoff1*, Jerry A. Zweigenbaum2, Timothy R. Croley1 1

U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, 5100 Paint Branch Parkway, College Park, MD 20740 2

Agilent Technologies, Inc., 2850 Centerville Road, Wilmington, DE, 19808

*Corresponding Author Ann M. Knolhoff Tel: +1 240-402-2917; Fax: +301-436-2624 E-mail address: [email protected]

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Abstract

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The ability to identify contaminants or adulterants in diverse, complex sample matrices is

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necessary in food safety. Thus, non-targeted screening approaches must be implemented to

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detect and identify unexpected, unknown hazardous compounds that may be present. Molecular

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formulae can be generated for detected compounds from high-resolution mass spectrometry data,

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but analysis can be lengthy when thousands of compounds are detected in a single sample.

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Efficient data mining methods to analyze these complex data sets are necessary, given the

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inherent chemical diversity and variability of food matrices. The aim of this work is to

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determine necessary requirements to successfully apply data analysis strategies to distinguish

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suspect and control samples. Infant formula and orange juice samples were analyzed with one

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lot of each matrix containing varying concentrations of a four compound mixture to represent a

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suspect sample set. Small molecular differences were parsed from the data, where analytes as

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low as 10 ppb were revealed. This was accomplished, in part, by analyzing a quality control

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standard, matrix spiked with an analytical standard mixture, technical replicates, a representative

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number of sample lots, and blanks within the sample sequence; this enabled the development of a

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data analysis workflow and ensured that the employed method is sufficient for mining relevant

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molecular features from the data.

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Keywords

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non-targeted screening, unknown analysis, chemometrics, food safety, LC/MS, HR-MS

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Introduction

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Chemical screening methodologies in food safety tend to focus on a specific list of compounds,

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such as pesticides or toxins; however, this approach can be limiting because adulterants or

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contaminants not included on a target list will not be identified. Developing approaches for non-

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targeted analysis is necessary in food safety to identify new and emerging risks. An accurate,

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high-throughput data analysis screening process for food matrices is needed, where the

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methodology could be applied to different commodities and compound types. An advantage to

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using liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry (LC/MS) is that thousands of compounds

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can be screened within a single sample, which is particularly useful when analyzing complex

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sample matrices. High-resolution mass spectrometry (HR-MS) enables sufficient mass accuracy

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for chemical formulae generation and is well equipped to resolve compounds with similar

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molecular weights.

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A non-targeted LC/HR-MS data analysis strategy would be a multi-step process. First,

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eluting compounds need to be determined and extracted from the data set. Next, interpretation of

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the detected ions involves the assignment of the monoisotopic peak and its m/z value, isotopic

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distribution analysis, and assigning any potential adducts or losses that may be associated with

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the eluting compound. With sufficient mass accuracy and minimal isotopic distribution error,

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the correct molecular formula can be generated for ions of interest.1,2 These molecular formulae

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can then be searched against an established molecular database where many compounds can be

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associated with a single molecular formula. Tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) can aid in

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determining the identity of the compound by dissociating ions of interest. In addition, if the

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compound is not present in a database, MS/MS may aid in predicting structural information.

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Data mining to identify unknown analytes can be challenging because thousands of

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compounds can be detected within a single food sample. One growing approach is foodomics

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where the complete molecular content of a food matrix is characterized.3-6 Food databases are

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also being generated7; building a database for a given commodity could be useful for commonly

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screened or adulterated samples8 because these intrinsic compounds can be removed from further

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analysis. However, many commodities require characterization and databases will need to be

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updated when the molecular content of the commodity changes. Implementing a statistical

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analysis complements these approaches by focusing on identifying compounds that are different

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between sample sets, rather than identifying all compounds in a given sample type.

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Statistical analyses, such as principal component analysis (PCA), are commonly used in

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biological applications for determining chemical differences between two or more different

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sample groups, such as control versus diseased states.9,10 This type of approach can be

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challenging when analyzing food matrices due to inherent sample complexity and diversity.

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There have been a few reports using statistical classification of food samples using LC/MS

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data11, which include applications in adulteration,12 classifications based on region or type,13,14

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and determining the presence of contaminants15. Developing these types of data processing

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approaches will be beneficial in high-throughput screening of foods and other complex sample

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matrices.

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The goal of this work is to determine necessary requirements for a data analysis

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workflow to distinguish molecular differences present in high, medium, and/or low abundance

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between control and suspect food samples. Compounds covering a large concentration range

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need to be parsed from the data to identify both highly abundant adulterants and low-level

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contaminants. For example, how does chemical complexity and lot-to-lot differences affect

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differentiation? What kind of quality controls need to be implemented in this type of workflow?

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Experimental design and data processing factors that impact final results are determined and

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suggestions are provided for successful method development for statistically analyzing suspect

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samples with an emphasis on identifying adulterants and contaminants for food safety.

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Materials and Methods

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Sample Preparation

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Three lots of milk-based infant formula (I.F.) and seven lots of pulp-free 100% orange juice

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(O.J.) were purchased from local grocery stores, each within the same brand of product but with

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different lot numbers. Five samples were prepared for each lot; 2 g of powdered formula and 2

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mL of O.J. were extracted in 10 mL acetonitrile in 15 mL polypropylene centrifuge tubes. These

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were rotated on a roller mixer (Stuart, Bibby Scientific, Staffordshire, UK) for 1 h at 33 rpm,

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centrifuged at 3900 rcf for 10 min, and filtered with 0.2 µm PTFE luer lock syringe filters

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(Grace, Deerfield, IL, USA).

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A 1 ng/µL mixture of colchicine, hydrocodone, ricinine, and yohimbine (Table S1; Cerilliant, Round Rock, TX, USA) was prepared in 90/10 (v/v) water/acetonitrile. This

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analytical standard mixture was spiked into replicate sample extracts from one of the lots for

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each sample matrix (lots 1 and 6 for I.F. and O.J., respectively) for an end concentration of 10,

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100, and 500 ppb (i.e., 5 replicates for each concentration). This represents the suspect sample

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groupings; samples from lots 1 and 6 were also prepared without the addition of the standard

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mixture, referred to as the unspiked matrix group. The control group of samples included lots 2

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and 3 for I.F. and lots 1-5 and 7 for O.J. The different comparisons of sample groups are listed

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in Table S2, where the control group is compared against each spiked matrix concentration level,

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combined concentration levels, and against the unspiked matrix group. A 50 ppb standard

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mixture was also prepared as a quality control (QC) sample, as was a blank (water injection),

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which were analyzed periodically throughout the sample sequence. All solvents used were

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Optima Grade (Thermo-Fisher Scientific, Pittsburg, PA, USA).

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Instrumentation

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A 1290 Infinity LC was used in combination with a 6550 Q-TOF (Agilent Technologies, Santa

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Clara, CA). A dual electrospray ionization (ESI) source was used with the following parameters:

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150 ºC drying gas temperature, 19 L/min gas flow, 35 psig nebulizer, 350 ºC sheath gas

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temperature and 12 L/min sheath gas flow. The ESI voltage was 3.5 kV, nozzle voltage was 0.5

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KV, and the instrument operated in positive ion MS scan mode and monitored m/z 100-1000.

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Reference masses were used to internally calibrate the data and included protonated purine (m/z

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121.0509) and protonated hexakis (1H, 1H, 3H-tetrafluoropropoxy) phosphazine (m/z 922.0098).

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The column was a Zorbax Eclipse Plus C18, 2.1x150 mm, 1.8 µm (Agilent Technologies). LC

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conditions included a sample injection volume of 5 µL, 30 ºC column temperature, and 0.5

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mL/min LC solvent flow rate with 0.1% formic acid (v/v) in water and acetonitrile, A and B,

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respectively. The gradient was a 3 min hold at 95% A, 17 min linear gradient to 10% A, 5 min

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hold at 10% A, and 5 min hold at 100% B.

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Data Analysis

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The developed data analysis workflow is displayed in Figure 1. MassHunter Qualitative

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Analysis (Agilent, Version B.07.00) was used for the initial determination and interpretation of

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eluting compounds by using “Find by Molecular Feature”. The data analysis method included:

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500 counts minimum ion peak height, compound filtering removed entities 4 out of 5 (80%)

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of each of the spiked matrix concentrations (outlined in green in Table S4). The quality score is

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calculated by an algorithm that considers the signal to noise, retention time consistency, peak

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shape and width, isotopic pattern, and mass difference between ions and their specified adducts.

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The data analysis method was also examined for the O.J. QC samples, where the “no peak limit”

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method was sufficient for extracting the analytes from the QC and spiked matrix samples. This

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emphasizes the importance of data analysis method testing and optimization for each data set and

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incorporating appropriate QC samples within the acquisition sequence.

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We suggest analyzing not only QC replicates within a sample sequence, but also the

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sample matrix of interest spiked with the QC mixture at low, medium, and high concentrations;

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the analytical standard mixture should contain compounds within the retention time and mass

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range of interest. This will be an appropriate data set to optimize or test data processing methods

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and will ensure its suitability for the collected data. Given the large number of molecular

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features that are detected in food matrices, it would be beneficial to increase the number of

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compounds in the QC standard mixture to ensure sufficient performance of the feature extraction

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method. Incorporating appropriate QC samples is also crucial in a statistical analysis workflow

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to minimize the effects of any experimental or instrumental variability that may be present due to

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performance differences over time or a change in LC solvents. For example, if the chemical

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background measured by the instrument changes, these molecular differences may erroneously

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influence sample type differentiation. Changes in sensitivity and mass accuracy can also be

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monitored with a QC sample and can indicate if different data processing settings are necessary.

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Similarly, data processing methods may also need to be modified for different sample matrices;

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this was the case for the I.F. and O.J. samples analyzed in this study. Furthermore, analyzing

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replicates (n>5/condition) yields higher confidence in the capabilities of both the instrument

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detection and data analysis processes because sample-to-sample variability can be monitored.

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The extracted molecular features for I.F. and O.J. are displayed in Figure S1. While both food matrices are chemically complex, the O.J. contained more ions of high abundance than the

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I.F. The number of molecular features found in the control lots of I.F. and O.J. were

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approximately 1200 and 10600, respectively. Manually mining this data for chemical

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differences between sample groupings would be incredibly difficult and time consuming, as

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would identifying every eluting compound in either of these individual sample types.

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Data Filtering

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Filtering the data is feasible when multiple replicates have been analyzed for each sample. It

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also becomes necessary due to the inherent capabilities of molecular feature extraction and food

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matrix complexity. For example, searching for all of the detectable compounds in a given

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sample results in the extraction of many features which are present in only one sample. In the

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example shown in Figure S2, over 2000 features were only detected in a single O.J. sample in all

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of the replicates and lots analyzed. Thus, requiring a feature to be present in at least 2 out of the

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total number of samples substantially reduces the number of features that will be considered. In

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the all spike and control O.J. comparison, the total number of features found in the sample

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groupings was reduced from 11516 to 9346.

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Because the optimized data analysis method was successful in reproducibly extracting the

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same features in 80% of the QC and spiked matrices (Table S4), features were required to be

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present within 60% of samples within a given sample set to further filter the data. This more

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conservative setting was used to accommodate any instances of inconsistent feature extraction,

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which may be due to the software algorithm or sample matrix variability. In the spiked (all

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concentrations) and control O.J. comparison, this reduced the number of features by nearly 4600.

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This filtering ensures that only reproducibly detected and extracted features are retained for

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subsequent analysis.

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Visualizing Molecular Differences Between Suspect and Control Groups and Between Sample

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Lots

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After data filtering, the remaining features were analyzed by PCA; the plots are displayed in

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Figure 2. PCA enables visualization of molecular similarities and differences based on the

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proximity of samples to one another. For both I.F. and O.J., differentiation of the combined

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spiked matrices and the control can be observed. It was expected that the lowest concentration

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of the spiked analytical standard, 10 ppb, would be the most difficult to distinguish between the

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two sample groupings. The 10 ppb spiked I.F. and control groups are clearly distinguished from

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one another; however, this is not obvious in the 10 ppb versus control O.J. comparison.

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We also investigated the inherent molecular differences between lots within the same

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brand of food matrix. Lot 1 and lot 6 from the I.F. and O.J. samples, respectively, were the lots

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spiked with the analytical standard mixture. These lots were also analyzed without the addition

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of the standard. By comparing these unadulterated lots to their respective control groups, any

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inherent molecular differences of that lot can be determined and these features would

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additionally contribute to any observed chemical differences between the spiked and control

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comparisons. Interestingly, lot 1 (I.F.) versus the control group does show some separation in

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the PCA plot; however, when the three lots are compared independently, this differentiation is

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not observed. It is expected that I.F. should be fairly consistent between different lots within the

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same brand. In contrast, the comparison of lot 6 (O.J.) and the control group do not clearly

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differentiate from one another, similar to the 10 ppb and control comparison for O.J. However,

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in the individual lot comparison of O.J., lots 7 and 6 cluster separately from the others, where lot

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6 is grouped between lot 7 and the remaining lots, indicating that it shares qualities of both

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sample groupings. This is likely why the 10 ppb samples do not appear to be in their own

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grouping in that comparison. Interestingly, the O.J. lots display distinguishable lot-to-lot

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variability, despite being purchased from the same brand and on the same date. This is not

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surprising given that the molecular content may be influenced by weather conditions, species of

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orange, and/or growth location, amongst other variables. Additionally analyzing data in this

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manner can also serve to identify any samples or sample lots that may be outliers, which can be

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excluded in further analyses.

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Statistical Analysis: T-Test and Fold Change

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An unpaired t-test was performed for each of the molecular features after data filtering. Multiple

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comparisons of the control (unadulterated food matrix extracts) and suspect groups (lots with

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analytical standard) included the combined spiked matrices, 10, 100, and 500 ppb spikes,

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respectively (listed in Table S2). Additionally, unadulterated lots 1 and lot 6, respectively from

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I.F. and O.J., were compared against their matrix control groups. As expected, the number of

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molecular features found to be statistically different between sample groupings decrease with a

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decrease in p-value threshold (FDR level), which is illustrated in Figure S3A. However, if a

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large number of features are found to be statistically significant between sample groupings, a

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certain number will be expected by chance; this is reflected in Figure S3B. For example,

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because a large number (>450) of features was found to be statistically different between the 500

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ppb and control O.J. groups, approximately 25 of these features would be expected by chance

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with an adjusted p-value of 0.05. To reduce the number of potential molecular features, the p-

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value threshold for each comparison was chosen where zero features are expected by chance,

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which is automatically calculated within MPP (Table S3). Alternatively, a smaller p-value

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threshold (e.g., 0.001) could be consistently chosen when a large number of distinguishing

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features are found, but at the risk of removing compounds of concern from the data set. Here, a

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judgment call needs to be made to determine an appropriate threshold based on the number of

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potential molecular feature candidates that differentiate sample groupings.

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Molecular features were then limited to ones that exhibited a 2-fold increase compared to

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the control group. The total number of features shown to initially distinguish the spike and

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control groups is displayed in Figure 3 (indicated in blue). This specific compound list was then

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searched again in the raw data files. Finding the presence of specific compounds is generally

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more definitive compared to the initial feature extraction because it searches the same m/z value

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within a specified retention time window for all data files rather than generically searching for

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eluting compounds. Because of this, the repeat filtering step was chosen to be more restrictive

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than the initial filtering, where 80% of features needed to be observed in a sample grouping to be

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included in the subsequent statistical comparison.

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The statistical analysis was then repeated on the extracted molecular features using this

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specified search. The features that distinguish sample groupings decrease after the repeat

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analysis, demonstrating that this recursive data treatment was necessary (indicated by red, Figure

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3). This was likely due to features that were not reproducibly detected and/or extracted from the

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data set. An automated recursion process would remove some of these manual processing steps,

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which some vendors are beginning to develop (e.g., Agilent’s Profinder). In all comparisons of

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the control and standard spike groupings, including the 10 ppb and control comparison, the four

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compounds in the analytical standard mixture were able to be parsed from the data, which

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demonstrates the utility of this developed data analysis workflow.

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Comparing the spiked matrices to a control group ensured the statistical data analysis

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methodology was sufficient for different concentrations of compounds present in two very

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different sample matrices. If spiked matrices are incorporated as a QC step, this data can also be

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used to test and optimize the statistical data analysis workflow. Different processing parameters

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or statistical tests may need to be used with different sample matrices or when greater molecular

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differences are expected due to matrix complexity or variability within a matrix type.

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In the I.F. comparisons, most of the t-test sets resulted in approximately 20 molecular

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features, which is a manageable number to attempt to identify (indicated in red, Figure 3).

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However, in the 500 ppb I.F. comparison, greater than 60 distinguishing compounds were found.

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Limiting the number of compounds of interest is essential because identification for even a single

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compound can be lengthy, but this must be done without removing potentially harmful

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compounds from the data set. In the lot 1 versus control I.F. comparison, less than 10

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compounds were found to distinguish these sample groups, which means it is likely that many of

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the features detected in the other comparisons are associated with the standard mixture. This is

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also indicated by an increase in the number of features with the amount of standard added

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(Figure 3).

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This same trend can be observed in the O.J. sample comparisons where 100 compounds

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are found to distinguish the 500 ppb level from the control (indicated in red, Figure 3). The

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resultant feature lists for the 500 ppb spike and control group comparisons for both I.F. and O.J.

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were evaluated against features found in the blanks and in their respective unspiked lots (lots 1

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and 6 for I.F. and O.J., respectively). None of the molecular features were found in the blank.

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There was no overlap for I.F., while 3 of the 99 features were intrinsic to lot 6 (Figure S4).

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Therefore, the majority of features are associated with the addition of the standard mixture.

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Thus, related molecular features can be removed if they coelute with another compound that

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exhibited greater ion intensity. An example of this process is shown in Table S5. Compounds

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within a 0.02 min retention time window were manually binned together, with the most abundant

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compound being submitted for further analysis. As indicated in green in Figure 3, this decreases

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the number of molecular features by more than half. While this optional strategy may eliminate

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features of interest, it was employed here to reduce analysis time.

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Molecular Formulae Generation and Database Searching

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Molecular formulae were generated for statistically different compounds between the control and

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suspect comparisons. The correct molecular formulae were generated for the compounds in the

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standard mixture and many of these formulae were the top scoring result; however, there were

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examples that were not. In the 10, 100, and 500 ppb comparisons in I.F., the molecular formula

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of colchicine was not the top formula match for that detected compound. In the 500 ppb

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comparison, there were three molecular formulae generated, each with scores greater than 97 out

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of a scale of 100. The molecular formula score evaluates metrics including the signal-to-noise,

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retention time, chromatographic peak width and shape, isotope pattern, and the mass difference

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amongst related ions such as dimers, trimers, and other adducts. The score reflects the

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probability that the feature is a real compound, with a score of 100 being a perfect fit. It is not

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obvious why the correct formula was not the top hit because the measured mass accuracy

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compared to the colchicine molecular formula is actually better than the top scoring formula. The

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relative isotopic distributions for both molecular formulae are also similar. For the O.J.

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comparisons, an incorrect molecular formula was generated as the top match instead of the

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formula for ricinine in the all spike, 100 ppb, and 500 ppb comparisons. In the 500 ppb O.J.

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comparison example, the score for the generated molecular formula of ricinine was 97.6, but the

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mass accuracy error compared against this compound was worse than the value reported for the

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top matching molecular formula (3.3 ppm). This example emphasizes the need for good data

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quality; high mass accuracy and accurately measured isotopic ratios can aid in generating the

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correct molecular formula.2 Furthermore, q-TOF instruments can be susceptible to higher mass

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accuracy error at high peak abundance due to saturation;18 however, the m/z value reported was

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taken below the 30% saturation level (MassHunter indicates saturated compounds) from the peak

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shoulders to minimize this effect. Because the best generated molecular formula may not

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correspond to the detected compound, multiple molecular formulae may need to be considered,

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where a cutoff score could be implemented.

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There are multiple small molecule compound databases that are continuously being

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created or updated. These databases are often not all encompassing, so multiple databases

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should be searched. Some vendor software can automatically search against certain molecular

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databases, but the capability to automatically link to multiple databases within the chosen

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analysis software rather than manually searching available databases would be beneficial. The

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reduced molecular formulae list generated by comparing 10 ppb and control O.J. groups was

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manually searched against four commonly used online databases (Table 1). The number of

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compounds that match a given molecular formula widely vary, which emphasizes the importance

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of a manageable number of compounds to identify. If the suspect compound has been studied

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previously, prioritizing the compounds by the number of references associated with it can be

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useful and can be accomplished within ChemSpider.19 However, if the compound is an

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emerging risk, it may not be well characterized. SciFinder also allows for prioritizing

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compounds, where the list of compounds can be reduced by a variety of properties including

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toxicity. This could be particularly useful if the molecular species is known to cause an illness.

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However, if the compound is truly an unknown, searching against a molecular database will be

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insufficient for identification and MS/MS approaches will be required for structure elucidation.

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Likewise, MS/MS analysis would be necessary to confirm a database assignment and to aid in

385

identification when no molecular formula is generated, as is the case for two compounds in Table

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S5.

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Searching the Metlin database revealed two metabolites of colchicine (gloriosine and

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desmethylcolchicine) that match molecular formula C21H23NO6 (m/z 385) listed in Table 1;

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these two compounds were also present as impurities in the standard solution. One of the

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compounds matching this molecular formula was removed from the list in Table S5 because it

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coeluted with colchicine. The MS/MS fragmentation listed in the Metlin database indicates that

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this is not a product ion of colchicine, which implies that the similar chemical structure of this

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metabolite causes its coelution. Furthermore, extracted ion chromatograms of colchicine (m/z

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400) and its putative metabolite (m/z 385) do not completely overlay, which further supports that

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m/z 386 is not a product ion of colchine (Figure S5). The two metabolites of colchicine were

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found in all of the comparisons for both I.F. and O.J., which is additional confirmation of the

397

data analysis workflow functionality.

398 399

Conclusions

400

Validating method performance is critical in ensuring that hazardous compounds will be parsed

401

from the data set. As mentioned previously, analyzing both QC standards and QC matrix

402

samples is beneficial in determining instrumental platform and data analysis performance. Data

403

processing settings are not universal for all matrices and data sets. QC matrix samples provide

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404

the ability to adjust those settings, including those for feature extraction, so that true unknowns

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have the highest probability of being determined in complex food samples. Additionally, QC

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samples can be used to determine if the chromatographic method resolves eluting peaks and

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results in consistent retention times and mass accuracy, which will enable identical compounds

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detected in multiple analyses to be properly binned. Irregular chromatographic peak shapes will

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also make feature comparison more challenging. If coelution or poor peak shapes affect the

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feature extraction of QC compounds, the chromatography should be optimized. It is also worth

411

noting that sufficient sample preparation, in addition to chromatography, is also required to

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ensure that compounds are detected from samples of interest, although this was outside the scope

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of this work.

414

Analyzing blanks within the sample sequence is also necessary. This was not critical in

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the present study because the samples were analyzed by the instrument within the same week. If

416

collected data needs to be compared with data analyzed in previous months or years, the

417

chemical background of the instrument platform may not be identical; this can also occur on a

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much smaller timescale (few days) and may lead to false positives. The collected data from

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blank injections can be used to ensure that differentiating compounds are not from the chemical

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background of the system. Similarly, analyzing the data in random order in the acquisition

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sequence will reduce this potential source of error. Incorporating an internal standard into each

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of the samples can also serve as a normalization factor to account for any instrumental

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performance differences.

424

Sample matrices where low lot-to-lot variability or a lower number of molecular features

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are expected will be easier to compare, especially between months, and even years. Despite the

426

O.J. being purchased on the same date and from the same brand, some of the lots were different

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than the others (Figure 2). This emphasizes the need to analyze a sufficiently large number of

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replicates and lots for a particular sample type to ensure a representative sample grouping. It is

429

expected that the molecular profile of O.J. could vary depending on the brand and blend, where it

430

is grown, the types of oranges used, and the climate. If there are inherent differences to the

431

samples being analyzed, there will be a larger number of statistically relevant molecular features

432

in addition to any adulterants/contaminants present, so additionally identifying these compounds

433

will increase analysis time. However, this is still an improvement compared to identifying all

434

compounds within a given sample. For sample types where a larger intralot variability is

435

expected within a sample type, a database for compounds that are common could be generated,

436

which could also reduce analysis time. Of course, these samples would need to be void of any

437

potential hazards.

438

While further advancement is needed to improve high-throughput identification, current

439

software tools are sufficient to detect molecular differences in food matrices, in spite of chemical

440

complexity. Statistical comparisons can be successful if appropriate quality controls are

441

implemented and if adequate sampling accounts for potential molecular variation within the

442

same sample type. This developed data analysis workflow can be used as a model for statistical

443

elucidation of compounds present in suspect food samples.

444 445

Abbreviations Used

446

LC/MS liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry

447

HR-MS high-resolution mass spectrometry

448

MS/MS tandem mass spectrometry

449

I.F. infant formula

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450

O.J. orange juice

451

QC quality control

452

MPP Mass Profiler Professional

453

PCA Principal Component Analysis

454 455

Acknowledgments

456

The authors would like to thank John Ihrie (FDA) for insightful discussions concerning the

457

statistical treatment of the data.

458 459

Supporting Information

460

Supporting figures (Figures S1-S5) and tables (Table S1-S5) as noted in the text.

461 462

References

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(1) Knolhoff, A. M.; Callahan, J. H.; Croley, T. R. J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 2014, 25, 1285-

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1294.

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(2) Kind, T.; Fiehn, O. BMC Bioinformatics 2007, 8, 105.

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(3) Castro-Puyana, M.; Herrero, M. TrAC-Trend. Anal. Chem. 2013, 52, 74-87.

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(4) García-Cañas, V.; Simó, C.; Herrero, M.; Ibáñez, E.; Cifuentes, A. Anal. Chem. 2012.

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(5) Herrero, M.; Simó, C.; García-Cañas, V.; Ibáñez, E.; Cifuentes, A. Mass Spectrom. Rev.

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2012, 31, 49-69.

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(6) Hu, C.; Xu, G. TrAC-Trend. Anal. Chem. 2013, 52, 36-46.

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(7) Scalbert, A.; Andres-Lacueva, C.; Arita, M.; Kroon, P.; Manach, C.; Urpi-Sarda, M.;

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Wishart, D. J. Agr. Food Chem. 2011, 59, 4331-4348.

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(8) Moore, J. C.; Spink, J.; Lipp, M. J. Food Sci. 2012, 77, R118-R126.

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(9) Pan, Z.; Gu, H.; Talaty, N.; Chen, H.; Shanaiah, N.; Hainline, B.; Cooks, R. G.; Raftery, D.

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Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2007, 387, 539-549.

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(10) Wang, C.; Kong, H.; Guan, Y.; Yang, J.; Gu, J.; Yang, S.; Xu, G. Anal. Chem. 2005, 77,

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4108-4116.

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(11) Knolhoff, A. M.; Croley, T. R. J. Chrom. A, DOI:

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2015.08.059.

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(12) Vaclavik, L.; Schreiber, A.; Lacina, O.; Cajka, T.; Hajslova, J. Metabolomics 2012, 8, 793-

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803.

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(13) Cotton, J.; Leroux, F.; Broudin, S.; Marie, M.; Corman, B.; Tabet, J.-C.; Ducruix, C.; Junot,

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C. J. Agr. Food Chem. 2014, 62, 11335-11345.

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(14) Vaclavik, L.; Lacina, O.; Hajslova, J.; Zweigenbaum, J. Anal. Chim. Acta 2011, 685, 45-51.

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(15) Tengstrand, E.; Rosén, J.; Hellenäs, K.-E.; Åberg, K. M. Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2013, 405,

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1237-1243.

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(16) Bolton, E., Wang, Y., Thiessen, P.A., Bryant, S.H. In Annu. Rep. Comput. Chem.; Elsevier:

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Oxford, UK, 2008, pp 217-240.

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(17) Smith, C. A.; O'Maille, G.; Want, E. J.; Qin, C.; Trauger, S. A.; Brandon, T. R.; Custodio,

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D. E.; Abagyan, R.; Siuzdak, G. Ther. Drug Monit. 2005, 27, 747-751.

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(18) Bristow, T.; Constantine, J.; Harrison, M.; Cavoit, F. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2008,

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22, 1213-1222.

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(19) Little, J.; Williams, A.; Pshenichnov, A.; Tkachenko, V. J. Am. Soc. Mass Spectrom. 2011,

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Analytical Chemistry

Tables Table 1. Number of compounds found for generated molecular formulae for differentiating analytes from the 10 ppb spiked and control orange juice groups. The molecular formulae from the standard mixture are outlined in green.

Generated Molecular Formula C 8H 8N 2O 2 C15H30O2S2 C18H21NO3 C16H10N7O3 C17H25NO10 C21H26N2O3 C29H47N5OS4 C21H23NO6 C22H25NO6 C22H22O9

ChemSpider

SciFinder

PubChem

Metlin

515 1 3974 2 21 6984 0 1786 1721 114

1414 36 9675 0 129 11430 0 2414 2301 360

1 0 15 0 1 3 0 0 2 1

1 0 13 0 0 9 0 8 3 17

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Figure Graphics Figure 1. Data analysis workflow for distinguishing suspect and control groups. A. Overall data processing to aid in identifying unknown compounds using a statistical approach. B. Procedure implemented for data filtering and statistical analysis.

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Analytical Chemistry

Figure 2. PCA of selected comparisons of sample groupings. “Spiked vs Control” compares the unadulterated lots with all the matrices spiked with different concentrations of analytical standard, while “10 ppb vs Control” includes unadulterated lots and only the 10 ppb spiked matrices. “Lot 1 vs Control” and “Lot 6 vs Control” enabled any molecular differences inherent to Lot 1 or 6 to be monitored without the contribution of the analytical standard. The unadulterated lots are also compared in “Lot Comparison” to observe the molecular differences present between lots of the same brand of sample matrix.

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Figure 3. Number of molecular features found to differ between sample groupings for different stages of the data analysis process.

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Analytical Chemistry

Graphic for Table of Contents

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