- Determination of florfenicol amine residues in animal edible tissues by an indirect competitive ELISA.
Determination of florfenicol amine residues in animal edible tissues by an indirect competitive ELISA.
Florfenicol (FF) is a broad-spectrum antibiotic used increasingly in aquaculture, livestock, and poultry to treat diseases. To avoid using labor-intensive instrumental methods to detect residues of FF in food and food products, a simple and convenient indirect competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ic-ELISA) method for florfenicol's major metabolite, florfenicol amine (FFA), was developed using a polyclonal antibody prepared in this study. FFA was covalently attached to carrier protein as immunogen by using the glutaraldehyde method. The antibodies obtained were characterized by an ELISA method and showed excellent specificity and sensitivity with the 50% inhibition values (IC 50) of 3.34 microg/L for FFA in PBS buffer. In the ELISA, sample extractions were performed by ethyl acetate/ammonium hydroxide (90 + 10, v/v) following combined acid hydrolysis of FF and its known metabolites. The limits of detection (LOD) calculated from the analysis of 20 known negative swine muscle, chicken muscle, and fish samples were 3.08, 3.3, and 3.86 microg/kg (mean + 3 SD), respectively. Recoveries of FFA fortified at the levels of 5, 50, 100, and 300 microg/kg ranged from 64.6 to 124.7%, with coefficients of variation of 11.3-25.8% over the range of FFA concentrations studied. Validation of the ELISA method with FFA-fortified swine muscle at the levels of 10, 50, 100, and 200 microg/kg was carried out using GC, resulting in a similar correlation in swine muscle ( r = 0.97). The results suggest that this ELISA is a specific, accurate, and sensitive method, which is suitable for use as a screening method to detect residues of FFA in animal edible tissues.