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High analytical costs and uncertainties in the assessment of human exposures to environmental contaminants are concerns
expressed by risk assessors. Environmental and biological monitoring studies require cost-effective, high sample capacity
methods to determine exposure pathways and minimize risk. Bioanalytical methods, such as immunoassays, have been shown
to fulfill these monitoring needs for several target analytes and matrices. Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are pollutants of
environmental and human health concern. We developed a tandem bioanalytical method for the cleanup and determination
of coplanar PCBs in soil and sediment samples. The method utilized a pressurized liquid extraction (PLE) followed by an
immunoaffinity chromatography (IAC) column cleanup with detection by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).
The IAC columns were developed using a co-planar PCB specific antibody. Column conditions including support
material, loading capacity, antibody binding, and elution solvents were optimized. The IAC column was compared with other
sample preparations used for PCBs (acid wash, multi-step cleanup) and was shown to effectively remove interferences from
the environmental samples. The columns could be reused more than 20 times without a loss in performance. The ELISA was
calibrated against PCB-126 and provided a single measurement representing a PCB-126 equivalent value for the 12 coplanar
PCBs. The ELISA was compared to a gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) procedure that provided a summation
of the co-planar PCBs present. Quantitative recoveries of 84-130% of PCB-126 were obtained in fortified samples using the PLE/
IAC/ELISA method. The ELISA-derived PCB-126 equivalent values and the GC/MS summation data were highly correlated for
all the samples with a correlation coefficient of 0.99.
Biography
Jeanette M. Van Emon completed her Ph.D. from the University of California, Davis and postdoctoral studies from the Lawrence Livermore National
Lab. Her research at the U.S. EPA includes the development and application of immunochemical methods for environmental monitoring and human
exposure assessment including biomarker discovery through proteomics. She is a Fellow of the American Chemical Society (ACS) and serves as an
ACS division councilor, chairman of the Western Regional Board and editorial board member of the
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
. She
has published more than 60 papers in reputed journals in addition to several EPA reports and has given presentations at national and international meeting
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