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New Analytical Methods
Stereoselective separation of the fungicide bitertanol stereoisomers by highperformance liquid chromatography and their degradation in cucumber Lianshan Li, Beibei Gao, Zhaoxian Zhang, mailun Yang, Xin Li, Zongzhe He, and MingHua Wang J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b04594 • Publication Date (Web): 29 Nov 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on November 30, 2018
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Stereoselective separation of the fungicide bitertanol stereoisomers
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by high-performance liquid chromatography and their degradation
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in cucumber
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Lianshan Li, Beibei Gao, Zhaoxian Zhang, Mailun Yang, Xin Li, Zongzhe He,
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Minghua Wang*
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Department of Pesticide Science, College of Plant Protection, Nanjing Agricultural
8
University; State & Local Joint Engineering Research Center of Green Pesticide
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Invention and Application, Nanjing, 210095, China
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∗Corresponding author. E-mail address:
[email protected] (M. Wang)
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ABSTRACT
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Bitertanol is a widely used triazole fungicide and consisted of four stereoisomers. A
13
new HPLC method was developed for simultaneous analysis of the four stereoisomers
14
in apple, pear, tomato, cucumber, and soil. The mechanism of separation was
15
explained with molecular docking and effects of thermodynamic parameters on the
16
resolution. The absolute configuration and optical rotation of four stereoisomers were
17
confirmed by X-ray diffraction and HPLC tandem circular dichroism detection,
18
respectively. A good linearity (R2 0.999) was obtained for four stereoisomers in all
19
matrix-matched calibration curves in the range of 0.02-10 mg/L. The mean recoveries
20
of four stereoisomers in five matrices ranged from 74.6% to 101.0% with an intra-day
21
and inter-day relative standard deviation of 0.6% to 9.9%. Stereoselective degradation
22
of bitertanol in cucumber was observed: (1R,2S)-bitertanol and (1R,2R)-bitertanol
23
were preferentially degraded with EF values from 0.5 to 0.43 at 7 d and 0.42 at 5 d,
24
respectively. This research provides a useful tool for the analysis of bitertanol
25
stereoisomers.
26 27
Keywords: bitertanol, chiral separation, X-ray diffraction, stereoselective degradation
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INTRODUCTION
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Chirality is a common property in pesticides.1 Approximately 25% of commercial
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pesticides were chiral over the world in 1996, and more than 40% in China in 2006.2,3
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Triazole fungicides play an essential role in preventing and controlling fungal disease
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through inhibiting14α-demethylase involved in the biosynthesis of fungal sterols.
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Triazole fungicides are becoming the most popular fungicides and have attracted an
35
increasing attention since the 1970s due to their high potency.4,5 Currently, there are
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31 commercial triazole fungicides, and 26 of those have 1 or 2 asymmetric carbon
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atoms containing 1 or 2 pairs of enantiomers.6 Most chiral triazole fungicides are
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marketed in racemic forms, except for diniconazole and uniconazole.
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Different stereoisomers exhibit similar physicochemical properties in an achiral
40
environment, but different activities in the biological environment.7 Many papers
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about enantioselective bioactivity, metabolism, degradation, and toxicity of chiral
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triazole fungicides have been published in recent years.8-14 Bitertanol [(1RS,
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2RS)-1-(biphenyl-4-yloxy)-3, 3-dimethyl-1-(1H-1, 2, 4-triazol-1 -yl) butan-2-ol] is an
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efficient triazole fungicide consisting of four stereoisomers (Supporting Information
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Figure S1) and was developed by Bayer in the 1970s.15,16 The ratio of four
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stereoisomers in the current commercial bitertanol is 4:4:1:1. Bitertanol has been
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frequently detected in food products and environmental samples due to frequent
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applications over a long period of time.17,18 To date, the research about bitertanol was
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mainly focused on residues and ecological toxicology. For instance, bitertanol
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significantly inhibits the activity of CYP3A4 and has potential androgenic-disrupting 3
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effects.19,20 Bitertanol can induce and inhibit rat cytochrome P450-dependent
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monooxygenases .21 The residue detection methods of bitertanol in baby food, food,
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and atmospheric samples were established using various technologies.22-25 However,
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the racemic bitertanol was used in the studies. The enantioselective bioactivity,
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metabolism, degradation, and toxicity of each bitertanol stereoisomer have not been
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reported.
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Therefore, it is necessary to establish an effective method for the analysis of
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bitertanol stereoisomers. The successful separation of racemate is fundamental to
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realize bitertanol at the level of stereoisomers. Some remarkable works have been
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accomplished regarding the separation of bitertanol by various techniques. For
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example, Zhang et al. reported that 21 triazole fungicides, including bitertanol, were
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separated with high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) -tandem mass
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spectrometry.26 Chai et al. separated bitertanol by normal-phase HPLC with two
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cellulose-based chiral columns.2 However, no publication has been found about the
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absolute configuration and chiral analysis of bitertanol stereoisomers in the
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environmental and food samples.
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In this study, a reversed-phase HPLC method was established for simultaneous
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determination of bitertanol stereoisomers in vegetables, fruits, and soil after the
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solid-phase extraction (SPE) cleanup of the extracts. The absolute configuration and
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optical rotation of bitertanol stereoisomers were confirmed. The stereoselective
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degradation in cucumber was determined.
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MATERIAL AND METHODS
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Chemicals and reagents. The bitertanol standard (≥97% purity) was provided by
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Jiangsu Sword Agrochemicals Co., Ltd. (Jiangsu, China). The optical isomers
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(≥99.9%) were prepared by Chiralway Biotech Co., Ltd. (Shanghai, China).
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HPLC-grade acetonitrile and methanol were purchased from TEDIA (Fairfield, USA).
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Ultra-pure water was obtained using MUL-9000 water purification systems (Nanjing
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Zongxin Water Equipment Co. Ltd., Nanjing, China). Analytical grade sodium
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chloride, anhydrous sodium sulfate, and other reagents were acquired through
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commercial sources. The Cleanert Florisil on a cartridge (500 mg, 6 mL) was
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purchased from Agela Technologies (Tianjin, China).
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Stock standards (1000 mg/L) of individual stereoisomers were prepared in
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acetonitrile and a series of concentrations working standards 10, 5, 2, 0.5, 0.02 mg/L
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were prepared by diluted in acetonitrile. Corresponding, the matrix-matched standard
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solutions at 10, 5, 2, 0.5, and 0.02 mg/L were prepared by adding the standard
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working solutions of four stereoisomers to the control matrices (apple, pear, cucumber,
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tomato, and soil). All standard working solutions were placed in the dark at 4 ºC.
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Chiral HPLC analysis. The separation was performed on an Agilent 1200 high
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perform liquid chromatograph (Agilent, California, USA) equipped an UV-detector
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and a chiral column Lux Cellulose-1 [cellulose tris (3,5- dime-thylphenylcarbamate)],
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250 mm×4.6 mm(i.d.), 5 μm] (Phenomenex, California, USA). The separation
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parameters were used to evaluate the effect of separation, including capacity factor k,
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separation factor α, and resolution factor Rs, which were expressed as follows: 5
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k=(tR-t0)/t0
(1)
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α=k1/k2
(2)
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Rs=2(t2-t1)/(w2+w1)
(3)
98 99
where tR is the retention time of enantiomers, t0 is the void time, k is the retention factor, and w represents the peak width at half height of stereoisomers.
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A series of mobile phase compositions (Methanol/water and acetonitrile/water)
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were used to explore the effect of mobile phase on the separation. Temperature
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influences the rate of the analyte sorption and desorption with the stationary phase
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and impacts the elution order of the stereoisomers.27,28 So, the impact of temperature
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on separation was discussed from 15 ºC to 35 ºC. The thermodynamic parameters
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were calculated according to the following equation of Van’t Hoff:
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lnk = -ΔH0 / RT + ΔS0 / R + lnΦ
(4)
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lnα = -ΔΔH0 / RT + ΔΔS0 / R
(5)
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The ΔH0 and ΔS0 represent the changes molecular enthalpy and molecular entropy
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of bitertanol stereoisomers between the mobile phase and stationary phase,
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respectively. T, R, and Φ represent absolute temperature, gas constant 8.314 J/(mol・
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K) and phase ratio, respectively. ΔΔH0 and ΔΔS0 were the values of ΔH2-ΔH1 and
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ΔS2-ΔS1. If the Lnk and Lnα have a good linearity with 1/T, the value of -ΔH/R,
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(ΔS/R+lnΦ), -ΔΔH0 / R, and ΔΔS0 / R could be calculated from the slop and intercept
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based on equations (4) and (5).
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Circular dichroism spectroscopy. The optical rotation and elution order of four
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stereoisomers were determined using HPLC (JASCO LC2000) with ultraviolet 6
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detector (JASCO UV2075) tandem CD (JASCO CD2095) detector at 254 nm. The
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mixed standard solution of four stereoisomers in acetonitrile was measured on Lux
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Cellulose-1 with acetonitrile/water (55: 45, v/v) as the mobile phase at the flow of 0.8
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mL/min.
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X-ray crystallography. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of four
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stereoisomers was carried out on a Bruker SMART APEX II CCD diffractometer with
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graphite-monochromated Cu-Ka radiation (λ=1.54178 Å) at 150(2) K. Data reduction
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and absorption corrections were performed with the SAINT and SADABS software
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packages, respectively. The structures were resolved by direct methods and refined by
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the full matrix least-squares based on F2 using the SHELXL-2016 program package.29
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The non-hydrogen atoms were refined anisotropically. All hydrogen atoms were
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placed at the calculated positions and refined as riding on the parent atoms.
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Molecular docking. The three-dimensional structures of the stereoisomers of
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bitertanol and the CSPs were developed, and the energy was minimized using Yasara
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molecular docking software. The stereoisomers were docked in the structures of the
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CSPs using Yasara molecular docking software. The results were sorted by binding
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energy, and more positive energy indicates stronger binding. The optimal result was
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chosen for further analysis.30-32
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Sample preparation. Extraction. Approximately 10 g of samples (apple, pear,
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cucumber, tomato, and soil) were weighed into a 250 mL conical flask, 5 mL water
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and 30 mL acetonitrile was added and shaken 1 h in the ZQLY-180 thermostatic
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oscillator (Shanghai, China) with 250 rpm/min at 25 ºC. The liquid phase was 7
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transferred into a 100 mL cylinder containing 2 g NaCl, then shaken for 1 min and
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allowed to stand for 30 min. A half of acetonitrile portion was dehydrated through 5 g
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of anhydrous Na2SO4 which followed by evaporating to dryness at 45 °C.
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Cleaning up the soil samples. The residue was dissolved in 4 mL n-hexane/acetone
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(98:2, v/v) and transferred into a Florisil SPE pretreated with 6 mL n-hexane. The
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column was rinsed with 5 mL n-hexane/acetone (95:5, v/v) and eluted by 12 mL
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n-hexane/acetone (88:12, v/v). The eluant was collected and evaporated at 45 ºC. The
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extractive was dissolved with 1 mL acetonitrile and filtered through a 0.22-μm nylon
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syringe filter for HPLC analysis.
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Cleaning up the vegetables and fruits samples. The residue was dissolved in 4 mL
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n-hexane/acetone (98:2, v/v) and transferred into an SPE column pretreated with 6 mL
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n-hexane/acetone (88:12, v/v). The column was washed with 5 mL n-hexane/acetone
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(93:7, v/v) and eluted by 12 mL n-hexane/acetone (88:12, v/v). The eluant was
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collected and evaporated to dryness at 45 ºC, then dissolved with 1 mL acetonitrile
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and filtered through a 0.22 μm nylon syringe filter for HPLC analysis.
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Method validation. The linearity, matrix effect, precision, accuracy, limit of
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detection (LOD) and limit of quantitation (LOQ) were used to evaluate the feasibility
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of the method for simultaneous determination of four bitertanol stereoisomers in fruits,
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vegetables, and soil matrices. Linearity was assessed by the linear regression of
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bitertanol stereoisomer peak areas versus the concentration. The matrix effect should
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be ignored in the slope ratios of matrix/solvent ranging from 0.90 to 1.10. If the slope
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ratios of the matrix/solvent were below 0.90 or higher than 1.10, a matrix suppression 8
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or enhancement effect should be concerned. The LOD and LOQ were defined as the
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concentration that produced a signal-to-noise of (S/N) 3 and 10.
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Accuracy and precision were estimated by recoveries, inter-day RSDs and intra-day
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RSDs of five spiked samples replicated at three concentrations over a continuous
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three days. The standard solutions were spiked to the control samples of apple, pear,
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tomato, cucumber, and soil at 0.02, 0.05, and 0.2 mg/kg for each isomer. The spiked
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samples were shaken for 1 min and overnight. The extraction and cleanup were
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performed as described above. The racemization and transformed of the stereoisomers
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in the sample processing was evaluated by separate recovery experiment for each
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stereoisomer in five matrices.
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Field experiment. The degradation test of bitertanol on cucumber was carried out
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in Nanjing, China. The trial blocks were divided into 30 m2 and isolated by buffer
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zone with three replicate plots. 40% WP of bitertanol was used as foliar spray at 800 g
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(a.i.)/ha. The cucumber samples were collected in 2 h, 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 10 days after
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spraying. All samples were separately homogenized and stored at -20 °C. The
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concentrations of four bitertanol stereoisomers were detected by HPLC.
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The first-order kinetics equation was used to estimate the degradation kinetics of
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the four stereoisomers in cucumber. The enantiomeric fraction (EF) was used to
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evalute the enantioselectivity of the bitertanol stereoisomer. The half-lives of each
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stereoisomer and EF were calculated using the following equations:
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C=C0e-kt
(6)
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T1/2=ln2/k
(7) 9
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EFA=C(1R,2S)/C(1R,2S) + C(1S,2R)
(8)
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EFB=C(1R,2R)/C(1R,2R) + C(1S,2S)
(9)
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where C represents the concentrations of the analyte at time t, and the k is the
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degradation rate constant. Cisomer is the concentration of the specified stereoisomer.
187 188
RESULT AND DISCUSSION
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Chromatographic condition optimization. Mobile phase optimization Although,
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both acetonitrile/water and methanol/water were used as the mobile phase in the
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isocratic reversed-phase HPLC method, the baseline separation was obtained only
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with acetonitrile/water as the mobile phase. Furthermore, a series of mobile phase
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compositions were investigated by changing the proportion of acetonitrile from 55%
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to 80%. When the acetonitrile percentage increased, the stereoisomers retention time
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shortened, the peak width narrowed, and the resolutions decreased significantly.
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Additionally, it was difficult to obtain the baseline separation when acetonitrile was
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below 55% within an acceptable retention time. Baseline separation of four
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stereoisomers was achieved with at the acetonitrile/water (55:45, v/v) as the mobile
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phase with 0.8 mL/min at 25 °C, and all other parameters were constant. The
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resolution of the first two enantiomers was 3.32, while the latter two enantiomers
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were 9.28 with a retention time within 25 min (Figure S2 and Table S1). Bitertanol
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had better solubility in acetonitrile than water and methanol. Therefore, acetonitrile
203
had a stronger power of eluting the analytes from the stationary phase. Zhang et al.
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also found that acetonitrile presents a stronger eluting strength than methanol for 10
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bitertanol, baseline separation of bitertanol was obtained with acetonitrile and 0.1%
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formic acid aqueous solution as mobile phase with 30 min. 30
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Effect of temperature on chiral separation. The effects of temperature on bitertanol
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enantiomers separation were carefully conducted from 15 ºC to 35 ºC on the Lux
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Cellulose-1 chiral columns (Figure 1). When the temperature fell below 25 ºC, a more
210
efficient chiral separation was obtained, but the retention time increased. However,
211
increasing temperature shortened the retention time, but decreased the separation
212
efficiency. Finally, 25 ºC was used as the optimal temperature to separate bitertanol
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stereoisomers. The results regarding k, Rs, and α are shown in the Table S2. The lnk′
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and lnα had a good linearity with 1/T in the temperature range of 15 ºC to 35 ºC with
215
R2>0.989. The thermodynamic parameters indicated that (1R,2S)-(+)-bitertanol and
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(1R,2R)-(+)-bitertanol had a weaker binding force with stationary than (1S,2R)-
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(-)-bitertanol and (1S,2S)-(-)-bitertanol, respectively. The ΔΔH1 and ΔΔS1 were -1.24
218
kJ/mol and -3.53 J/(mol.K), showing that enthalpy drove the separation of
219
(1R,2S)-(+)-bitertanol and (1S,2R)-(-)-bitertanol. In contrast, ΔΔH02 and ΔΔS02 were
220
0.26 kJ/mol and 2.4 J/(mol.K), indicating that the separation of (1R,2R)-(+)-bitertanol
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and (1S,2S)-(-)-bitertanol was driven by entropy (Table 1). The binding force between
222
stationary and stereoisomers will become weaker with the temperature increase, and
223
the stereoisomers are more easily eluted from the stationary phase. According to Chai
224
research,
225
chromatographic conditions. However, the result showed that the ∆∆H0 values were
226
negative and the ∆∆S0 values were positive, so, enthalpy and entropy contribute
0
bitertanol
stereoisomers
were
separated
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under
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together to the separation of two enantiomers separation in normal-phase
228
chromatography with Lux-2 and Lux-3 chiral column.2
229
Absolute configuration and optical rotation of stereoisomers. Crystallization
230
was utilized to obtain four single-crystals of bitertanol stereoisomers at a low
231
temperature, and single-crystal X-ray analysis is shown in Figure 2. The details of
232
data collection, structure refinement, and crystallography are summarized in Table 2.
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Combining single-crystal X-ray analysis with the spectrogram of CD and UV (Figure
234
3) showed that the elution order of four enantiomers was (1R,2S)-(+)-bitertanol,
235
(1S,2R)-(-)-bitertanol, (1R,2R)-(+)-bitertanol and (1S,2S)- (-)-bitertanol, respectively.
236
This study has significance for confirming and oriented synthesis of high-efficient
237
stereoisomers for bitertanol in future research.
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Molecular docking. The research of the interactions between the analytes and the
239
CSPs could explore the mechanisms of stereoisomer separation. The stereoisomers
240
were separately docked into the CSPs of the Lux-1 column. Binding energy for
241
(1R,2S)-(+)-bitertanol, (1S,2R)-(-)-bitertanol, (1R,2R)-(+)-bitertanol and (1S,2S)-(-)-
242
bitertanol were 5.3Cc, 5.4BCc, 5.6Bb, and 6.0Aa kcal/mol, respectively. In this research,
243
two kinds of forces were mentioned including π-π stacking and hydrogen bonds. The
244
π-π stacking was formed between the phenyl of bitertanol and the 3,5-dimethyl phenyl
245
of CSPs. Hydrogen bonds were formed between the 1,2,4-triazole in bitertanol and
246
the carbonyl of CSPs. The bond lengths and energies were also different. The higher
247
binding energy and shorter lengths may have contributed to easier combinations
248
between the CSPs and bitertanol stereoisomers, which resulted in the different elution 12
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orders. Beyond that, the steric hindrance, dipole-dipole interactions, and van der
250
Waals force may have contributed to the binding energy. The stereo matching between
251
the chiral cavity of CSPs and stereoisomers was also different, which is an important
252
factor to affect the chiral separation (Figure 4). Xie et al reported that hydrogen bonds
253
were the major factor in the separation of amide herbicides by AY-H
254
[amylasetris-(5-chloro-2-methylphenylcarbamate)],
255
((S)-1-phenylcarbamate)], OD-H [cellulose tris-(3, 5-dimethylphenylcarbamate)] and
256
OJ-H [cellulose tris-(4-methylbenzoate)] columns.32
AS-H
[amylasetris
257
Linearity, matrix effect, LOD, and LOQ. Four stereoisomers of bitertanol
258
showed a good linearity in solvent and five matrices in the range of 0.02-10 mg/kg
259
with the R2 > 0.999. The results indicated that no noticeable matrix effect was found
260
for four stereoisomers in soil, pear, apple, and tomato. However, a weak matrix
261
enhancement effect was found in cucumber for all stereoisomers in the range from
262
15.3% to 18.8%. The LOD and LOQ for four stereoisomers in five matrices were 2.2
263
-11.5 µg/kg and 7.2 -38 µg/kg, respectively (Table S3).
264
Accuracy and precision. An excellent accuracy and precision of four
265
stereoisomers were obtained in five matrices. There was no racemization and
266
transformation of the stereoisomers in different matrices during the sample processing
267
step (Figure S3). The mean recoveries ranged from 74.6% to 101.0 % with 0.7–9.9 %
268
of intra-day (n=5) RSD and 0.6-7.1% of intre-day (n=15) RSD for bitertanol
269
stereoisomers (Table S4), which showed good accuracy and precision and could apply
270
to the simultaneous determination of four enantiomers of bitertanol in soil, vegetables, 13
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and fruits.
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Stereoselective degradation in cucumber. The dissipation of four stereoisomers
273
in cucumber followed first-order kinetics (R2, 0.9303-0.9954) and half-lives of
274
(1R,2S)-, (1S,2R)-, (1R,2R)-, (1S,2S)-bitertanol were 4.4, 5.1, 4.0, and 4.8 d (Figure
275
S4). The representative chromatogram is shown in Figure S5. The results indicated
276
that (1R,2S)-bitertanol and (1R,2R)-bitertanol were preferentially degraded in
277
cucumber and the half-lives of A-bitertanol (the first pair of enantiomers
278
((1R,2S)-bitertanol and (1S,2R)-bitertanol)) and B-bitertanol (the second pair of
279
enantiomers ((1R,2R)-bitertanol and (1S,2S)-bitertanol)) were all significantly
280
different (P