1. Introduction
The potato (
Solanum tuberosum L.) is a tuber produced by the potato plant, an herbaceous perennial plant belonging to the
Solanaceae family. It consists of about 80% water, 7% carbohydrates (88% is starch), 2% protein, and negligible amounts of fat, depending on the cultivar. It is a rich source of vitamin C and a moderate source of vitamins from the B complex, minerals, fibers, and antioxidants, which prevents aging-related diseases [
1,
2]. The world production is led by China (20–22%), followed by India, Russia, Ukraine, and the United States [
1,
2]. The species originated in the Andes Mountains, near Lake Titicaca, and was taken to other regions of the world by European settlers. It is the fourth most consumed crop in the world, surpassed only by rice, wheat and maize, and remains an essential crop in Europe, especially in eastern and northern regions [
2].
Like several other crops, potato plantations are subject to the attack of various species of bacteria, fungi, and insects that compromise their productivity. Due to its importance expressed into its high consumption worldwide (the global importance of potatoes is so great that FAO, the UN body for Agriculture and Food instituted 2008, as the “
International Year of Potatoes”), it is essential to create more resistant varieties, contributing to an increase in productivity and thus minimizing hunger in several countries. The scarcity of these resistant varieties requires the use of pesticides to control pests and contribute to increase productivity [
1,
3,
4].
Depending on the degree of toxicity, each pesticide has a maximum permissible value of the application, which should not be exceeded to minimize the harmful effects on human health. Exposure to high amounts of pesticides can cause neurological and oncological disorders, among others [
5,
6]. Generally, the maximum residue limits for most pesticides are variable depending on their toxicity. For glyphosate and its metabolite [
7], the maximum value is 0.01 mg/kg.
Herbicides can be classified as (i) selective, which inhibit or slow the growth of weeds by keeping the desired vegetation intact, and (ii) non-selective ones, which destroy any form of plant life. The selective ones can differentiate the vegetation of interest from the unwanted due to its mode of action, inactivating the enzymatic action of unwanted plants and the metabolic processes associated with their development [
8,
9]. On the other hand, non-selective herbicides act more generally and can also act through enzymes, modifying those that are common in all plant species. They can also act by photosynthesis through the solar energy captured by chlorophyll. This deviation of the flow of electrifications through photosystem I result in the production of free radicals, which, as they are very reactive, end up destroying cell membranes, leaving the leaves of plants yellow and dry. Another mode of action is processed by blocking the energy associated with photosystem II, where the herbicide binds to the plastoquinone protein (involved in the carrier chain of electrodes), reducing its effectiveness, thus slowing the growth of the plant due to the reduction of available energy from photosynthesis. Non-selective herbicides can also modify the cell cycle by inhibiting the development of meristematic cells, preventing cell division [
9].
Despite the efficiency of herbicides in the control of pests and the consequent increase in crop productivity, they have been the target of attention from the scientific and medical communities due to their potentially harmful effects on human health. BATALEX, which has as active substance the isopropyl-N-(3-chlorophenyl) carbamate (chlorpropham), is amongst the herbicides commonly used as anti-sprouting agent, to which are associated toxicological and carcinogenic effects. Chlorpropham is an organic pesticide belonging to the carbamate group (functional group —NHCOO), being chemically classified as a carbamic acid (NH
2COOH). The generic reaction of carbamate synthesis is represented in
Figure 1 [
10].
The synthesis of carbamates may occur: (a) by reaction of an amine, with a carbonyl group and alcohol; (b) from the reaction between amines with chloroformate (alcohols or phenols reaction products with phosgene); and (c) from the reaction of alcohol or phenols with isocyanates obtained from the phosgene reaction with amines, shown in
Figure 2 [
11].
Chlorpropham inhibits the formation of meristematic cells, being widely used as anti-sprouting agent (inhibits the formation of turnip greens) in potatoes, thus contributing to increasing its shelf life with high quality parameters. In addition, this action inhibits the release of α-solanine and α-chaconine, which are harmful for health.. Meristematic cells are totipotent cells located in regions where plant growth occurs; they are undifferentiated cells that have great multiplication capacity and to differentiate in any cell type [
12,
13]. Chlorpropham is classified as a medium toxicity pesticide (toxicological class II). Currently, its use is authorized in the European Union countries and is legislated as the maximum limit of 20 µg/kg. The lethal dose (LD
50) of chlorpropham is 3.80 mg/kg [
6].
The low concentrations of pesticides residues in foods make difficult its direct quantification by chromatographic methods, such as gas chromatography (GC) or liquid chromatography (LC) [
14]. Consequently, it is necessary to apply an sample preparation techniques for the extraction and preconcentration of the pesticides or other residues from foods or other samples. In this sense, different extraction procedures have been recommended to extract herbicides from foods, such as vortex-assisted liquid–liquid microextraction (VALLME) [
15], solid-phase extraction (SPE) [
16], solid-phase microextraction (SPME) [
17], dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (DLLME) [
14], among others. These extraction procedures are expensive, labor-intensive, and time-consuming. Today, a quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged and safe method (QuEChERS), followed by clean-up steps involving dispersive solid-phase extraction (dSPE), is one of the most promising user-friendly and high throughput extraction procedures, using low solvent and sample amounts to extract pesticides from complex matrices, providing high-quality results with a reduced number of steps [
18,
19].
The current work aimed to validate and apply a state-of-the-art, quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged, and safe microextraction technique followed by dispersive solid-phase extraction-based clean-up (µQuEChERS-dSPE) combined with ultra-high performance liquid chromatography equipped with a photodiode array detection system (UHPLC-PDA) for the quantification the anti-sprout agent, chlorpropham, in different parts of potato (potato skin, pulp, and whole potato). The influence of cooking on chlorpropham levels was also evaluated.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Chemicals
All solvents and other chemicals were of analytical quality grade. HPLC grade acetonitrile (MeCN) was obtained from LabScan (Dublin, Ireland). Herbicide standard, chlorpropham (98%), as well as the buffered salts used in QuEChERS extraction–sodium chloride (NaCl), anhydrous magnesium sulfate (MgSO4), disodium hydrogen citrate sesquihydrate (C6H8Na2O8), and trisodium citrate dihydrate (C6H5Na3O7·2H2O), were supplied by Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). dSPE clean-up DisQuETM tubes with primary, secondary amine (PSA), MgSO4, and C18 were obtained from Waters (Milford, MA, USA). Formic acid (FA, ≥99%) and acetic acid (≥99%) were supplied from Merck (Darmstadt, Germany). Ultrapure water (H2O) from a Milli-Q ultrapure water purification system (Millipore, Bedford, MA, USA) was used for preparing the UHPLC mobile phase. Before UHPLC-PDA analysis, the final extracts were filtered through 13 mm with 0.22-µm PTFE membranes.
2.2. Sample Preparation
The potato samples (1 Kg) were provided by the Agricultural Markets of Porto Moniz (Asterix variety), Prazeres, and Santana (Desire variety). From each sample, the following potato constituents: skin, pulp, and potato (skin + pulp) were analyzed raw and cooked.
2.3. Standard Solution
Individual stock solution of chlorpropham standard was prepared at a concentration of 400 mg/L in MeCN containing 0.1% of acetic acid and stored at −20 °C in the dark for a maximum of six months. Intermediate stock solution at 5 mg/L of chlorpropham was prepared in MeCN. The working standard solutions used to construct the calibration curve were prepared by the appropriate dilution of aliquots of the intermediate stock solution in MeCN to obtain the concentration range of 1–200 μg/Kg. The density was used to convert mg/L to μg/Kg. All standard solutions were labeled and stored at −20 °C.
2.4. µQuEChERS-dSPE Procedure
For µQuEChERS extraction, 500 µg of sample was weighed to the accuracy of 0.0001 mg, put into a centrifuge tube of 5 mL polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), mixed, and left to stand for 15 min at room temperature. Afterward, 1000 µL MeCN was added, and the resulting mixture was shaken vigorously for 1 min with a vortex ensuring that the solvent interrelated well with the entire sample. Buffer salts, MgSO
4, NaCl, C
6H
5Na
3O
7·2H
2O and C
6H
8Na
2O
8, in proportions of 4:1:1:0.5, were added to the homogenized mixture, vortexed for 2 min and centrifuged at 4000 rpm for 3 min at 25 ± 1 °C, ending the partition step and the consequent separation of phases (aqueous and organic phase) [
19]. For removal of potentially interfering compounds, 500 µL of the supernatant was placed in a DisQuETM dSPE clean-up tube containing 2.5 mg of PSA, 15 mg of MgSO
4, and 2.5 mg of C18, to remove proteins, lipids, and other interferences. The mixture was centrifuged (4000 rpm, 3 min, 25 °C), and 200 µL of supernatant was filtered through a 0.22-µm PTFE filter membrane to a vial for UHPLC-PDA analysis.
2.5. UHPLC-PDA Conditions
The separation, identification, and quantification of chlorpropham was performed on a Waters Ultra Pressure Liquid Chromatographic Acquity system (UPLC, Acquity H-Class) (Milford, MA, USA) coupled with a Waters Acquity quaternary solvent manager (QSM), an Acquity sample manager (SM), a column heater, a 2996 PDA detector and a degassing system. The whole configuration was controlled by Empower software v2.0 from Waters Corporation. The used column for chlorpropham separation was CORTECS UPLC C18 (2.1 × 100 mm, 1.6 μm) maintained at a temperature of 30 °C. The mobile phase was composed of H2O with 0.1% formic acid (solvent A) and MeCN (solvent B) according to the following gradient: isocratic at 10% B from 0 to 3 min, from 3 to 4 min gradient from 10 to 50% B, gradient from 50 to 65% B from 4 to 10 min, gradient from 65 to 70% from 10 to 11 min, and finally from 70 to 75% from 11 to 19 min. Following the system, a return to the initial mobile phase composition from 75% to 10% was within 1 min. Five µL of extract was injected at constant flow of 350 μL/min.
For quantification purposes, the PDA detection was performed at 235 nm. The chlorpropham was identified by comparing its retention time (RT) and spectral features obtained for an extract with those of the pure standard. The quantification was carried out by means of the chlorpropham standard in triplicate. The results were presented as mean ± standard deviation. The peak purity was confirmed peak by the screening of the chlorpropham UV spectrum from the beginning to the end of the peak.
2.6. Method Validation
The µQuEChERS method was validated concerning the linearity, limit of detection (LOD), limit of quantification (LOQ), precision (intra-day and inter-day), matrix effect, and recovery, according to European Union SANCO/12495/2011 guidelines.
The absence of interfering peaks at the chlorpropham RT, is used to assess the method selectivity and correspond to the level to which a method can quantify a specific analyte in a complex mixture without interference from other analytes.
Nine-points calibration curve was constructed with the following chlorpropham concentrations: 200, 150, 100, 50, 25, 10, 5.0, 2.5, and 1.0 μg/Kg, to determine the method’s linearity. As part of the method linearity assessment, linearity range and determination coefficients (R2) were evaluated.
The LOD, the lowest concentration of analyte that can be detected, and the LOQ, the lowest quantity of analyte that can be calculated quantitatively with satisfactory precision and accuracy, under the stated operating conditions of the method, were used to evaluate the method sensitivity. These parameters were determined by using the residual standard deviation (Sy/x) of corresponding curves being LOD and LOQ calculated by 3.3 Sy/x/b and 10 Sy/x/b, respectively, where b represents the slope of calibration curve.
Recovery was evaluated at three concentration levels (in triplicate) within the linear range of the calibration curve, which allowed to evaluate the method accuracy. It is calculated through the relation of theoretical concentration added to the sample (Ctheoretical) to the experimental concentration (Cexperimental) of chlorpropham in the sample. The Cexperimental was calculated by the variation between the peak area of the chlorpropham in spiked and non-spiked samples.
Intra- and inter-day precision, expressed as percentage of relative standard deviation (% RSD), was calculated from triplicate assays of sample spiked at three concentration levels during the same day (repeatability) and in five consecutive days (reproducibility).
The matrix effect, most noticeable in complex samples, was determined based on the method of “standard additions” applied to the sample investigated, which was measured by the correlation of the slopes from the calibration curve of the chlorpropham in sample and in the solvent-based matrix.
2.7. Statistical Analysis
The multivariate data analysis (MVDA) was performed using the MetaboAnalyst 5.0 web-based tool (Chong et al., 2018; Pang et al., 2021). The data obtained were normalized (data transformation by cubic root and data scaling by auto-scaling). Then, principal component analysis (PCA) (
Figure S1, supplementary material) and partial least squares-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) were used to provide insights into separations among the samples under study.
4. Conclusions
A simple, fast, cheap, and high-throughput µQuEChERS-dSPE followed by UHPLC-PDA was developed and validated to quantify chlorpropham in different parts of potatoes. Satisfactory figures of merit of the method were attained in terms of linearity (R2 ≥ 0.999), intra-day/inter-day precision (RSD < 16%), recovery (94.5–125%), and sensitivity (low LOD and LOQ) for chlorpropham. In the potato skin before cooking, extremely high chlorpropham values were obtained, especially in the sample from Santana (40.7 μg/Kg) and Prazeres (85.4 μg/Kg), which exceeded the accepted and legislated by the EU limit, 20 μg/Kg. For the remaining parts of potatoes, independently if raw and cooked, the concentration of chlorpropham was lower than legislated by the EU. Regarding the influence of cooking on chlorpropham concentration on the different constituent parts of the potato, there was a significant decrease (90% on average) in the chlorpropham concentration in the potato skin of the cooked potato.
The µQuEChERS-dSPE revealed a suitable green and state-of-the-art microextraction technique for routine practice since it is simple, cheap, accurate, precise, and environmentally friendly. In addition to UHPLC-PDA analysis, it constitutes a high throughput separation technique with a high-resolution power in a short run time, which makes the µQuEChERS-dSPE/UHPLC-PDA methodology a useful approach for its application to other types of pesticides and food matrices. After cooking, the concentration of chlorpropham in potatoes was lower than the maximum residue limits (MRLs) set by the EU, which means that the cooking process has a significant impact on the degradation of chlorpropham. The obtained results revealed that the use of chlorpropham in potatoes as an anti-sprouting agent does not constitute any risk to human health, provided that the concentration levels determined for the analyzed samples are below their MRL value.