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HomePesticides and Mycotoxins in Cannabis/HempAnalysis of California Cannabis List of Pesticides, Mycotoxins, and Pyrethrins Using Ascentis® Express Biphenyl Column

Analysis of California Cannabis List of Pesticides, Mycotoxins, and Pyrethrins by LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS Using Ascentis® Express Biphenyl and SLB®-5ms Columns

Geoffrey Rule, Ph.D, Principal R&D Scientist, Katherine Stenerson, Product Manager, Cannabis & Pharma QC Reference Materials

MilliporeSigma

Cannabis Analysis for Pesticides, Mycotoxins, and Pyrethrins

Clinical studies into medical use of cannabis have been limited by availability of federally approved high THC cannabis. Recently, several sites were given approval to produce high THC cannabis products for use in federally funded clinical studies. Not unexpectedly, these sites are also expected to provide high quality cannabis products for use in such studies.

To produce medical quality cannabis products there are a number of attributes necessary to demonstrate quality including potency, purity, and the absence of hazardous contaminants such as heavy metals, mycotoxins, and pesticides.

Here we show chromatography achieved with our Ascentis® Express Biphenyl HPLC column, SLB®-5ms GC column, and our newly developed Certified Reference Material (CRM) mixes for the California pesticide list. For the LC-MS  portion of the analysis figures are provided for the five mycotoxin standards, as well as six plant-derived pyrethrins run on the biphenyl column under the same chromatographic conditions. The biphenyl phase was selected for the superior peak shape provided for the analytes of interest. For the GC-amenable pesticides, the SLB®-5ms column was chosen for its low bleed and inertness. 

LC-MS/MS Analysis of Pesticides, mycotoxins, and Pyrethrins Using Ascentis® Express Biphenyl Column

Chromatographic Conditions and MS Parameters

Instrumentation: Agilent 1290 series HPLC and autosampler with 6460 QQQ

Table 1.LC conditions for pesticides, mycotoxins, and pyrethrins
Table 2.MS source parameters
A chromatogram illustrating the analysis of 66 California pesticides in certified reference material (CRM) mixes, each compound at a concentration of 5 ng/µL in a solvent mixture of acetonitrile and water (70/30 v/v). The analysis is conducted using an Ascentis® Express biphenyl column. The chromatogram features multiple peaks of varying heights and colors, representing different pesticides, spread across the horizontal axis labeled from 0 to 17.5 minutes, indicating the retention time for each compound. The vertical axis is labeled with relative intensity from 0 to 1.75e7.

Figure 1.Analysis of 66 California pesticides in CRM mixes (5 ng/µL each compound in acetonitrile/water 70/30 v/v) using Ascentis® Express biphenyl column.

Table 3.Retention times for pesticide, mycotoxin, and pyrethrins analysis by LC-MS
Note: Captan, methyl parathion, PCNB, and chlordane were not included as they are typically analyzed by GC-MS (see below). Spinetoram reference material was not available at the time of analysis.
A chromatogram showing the analysis of five mycotoxins under identical chromatographic conditions. The x-axis, labeled “Counts vs. Retention Time (min),” ranges from 0 to 12 minutes, while the y-axis, labeled “Intensity,” ranges from 0 to 2.5e7. Distinct peaks are labeled for Aflatoxin B1, G1, B2, G2, and Ochratoxin. The concentrations are 100 pg/µL for Aflatoxin B1 and G1, 30 pg/µL for Aflatoxin B2 and G2, and 500 pg/µL for Ochratoxin in a solvent mixture of acetonitrile and water (70/30 v/v).

Figure 2.Analysis of five mycotoxins under the same chromatographic conditions. (100 pg/µL Aflatoxin B1 and G1, 30 pg/µL Aflatoxin B2 and G2, and 500 pg/µL for Ochratoxin in acetonitrile/water 70/30 v/v).

 A chromatogram showing the analysis of six pyrethrins under identical chromatographic conditions. The x-axis, labeled “Counts vs. Acquisition Time (min),” ranges from 6 to 12 minutes, while the y-axis, labeled “Intensity,” ranges from 0 to 30 units. Peaks are labeled for Pyrethrin I, Cinerin I, Jasmolin I, Pyrethrin II, Cinerin II, and Jasmolin II. Each compound is present at a concentration of 4 ng/µL in a solvent mixture of acetonitrile and water (70/30 v/v).

Figure 3.Analysis of six pyrethrins (4 ng/µL each in acetonitrile/water 70/30 v/v ) under the same chromatographic conditions.

GC-MS/MS Analysis of Pesticides Using the SLB®-5ms Column

Chromatographic Conditions and MS parameters

Instrumentation:  Agilent 7890 GC with 7000C series QQQ

Table 4.GC conditions for pesticide determination
Chromatogram obtained for the analysis of TraceCERT® California pesticide mixes having a total of 44 compounds using a SLB ®-5ms gas chromatography column.

Figure 4.Analysis of TraceCERT® California pesticide mixes using the SLB®-5ms GC column.

Table 5.Retention data for pesticides on the SLB®-5ms column

Discussion: Improved Sensitivity and Resolution of Pesticides in Cannabis

Figures 1-4 illustrate chromatographic peak shape and retention times in the LC and GC analysis of the compounds in the TraceCERT® California Pesticide mixes plus five mycotoxins. The Ascentis® Express Biphenyl phase was selected for the LC-MS/MS analysis as it provided the best peak shape for the combination of pesticides, mycotoxins, and pyrethrins. The sharper peaks afforded by the Fused-Core® particle technology of the Ascentis® Express column line provide improved sensitivity and higher resolution for more accurate quantitation of these compounds. For the GC-MS/MS portion of the analysis, the SLB®-5ms was chosen for its low bleed and high inertness characteristics. In addition, use of a FocusLiner™ in the GC inlet ensured minimal adsorption and excellent injection reproducibility.

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