Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17490
Title: Differentiation of two morphologically similar Amazonian Aniba species by mass spectrometry leaf fingerprinting
Authors: Galaverna, Renan de S.
Sampaio, Paulo de Tarso Barbosa
Barata, Lauro Euclides Soares
Eberlin, M. N.
Fidélis, Carlos Henrique de Vasconcelos
Keywords: Drug Products
Forestry
Mass Spectrometry
Plants (botany)
Spectrometry
Accurate Mass Measurements
Illegal Practices
Ionization Techniques
Leaf Surfaces
Mass Spectra
Ms/ms Fragmentation
Plant Species
Reliable Methods
Principal Component Analysis
Mass Spectrometers
Plants
Wood
Issue Date: 2015
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Analytical Methods
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 7, Número 5, Pags. 1984-1990
Abstract: The wood of the Amazonian tree Aniba rosaeodora Ducke has been intensively exploited since the 1920s and remains a much valued material in the perfume industry, leading to its classification as a plant at risk of extinction. Another Amazonian tree, Aniba parviflora, is morphologically highly similar to the much more valuable A. rosaeodora and is illegally commercialized in the seedling stage as counterfeit samples of the much more valuable A. rosaeodora. A technique that would be able to perform rapid, versatile and reliable differentiation of the two species would therefore be valuable to detect such illegal practice. Herein we describe unequivocal differentiation between the two morphologically similar Amazonian Aniba species by leaf mass spectrometry fingerprinting using a small fragment of the leaf. Two ionization techniques were tested (ESI and VL-EASI), and mass spectra obtained from many leaves and at different points on the leaf surface belonging to the same species were very similar and reproducible, whereas spectra between the two species were markedly different. Marker ions detected in each spectrum were structurally characterized based on the accurate mass measurements, MS/MS fragmentation patterns and comparison of the results with reported data. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used to validate the differentiation of the spectra. MS leaf fingerprinting using both ESI and VL-EASI offers therefore a rapid, versatile and reliable method to differentiate morphologically similar plant species, as demonstrated herein for the two Amazonian Aniba species at the seedling stage. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1039/c4ay02598a
Appears in Collections:Artigos

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