GC-MS-IRMS: Addressing authenticity of fish oils by carbon and hydrogen isotope fingerprints
Applications | 2023 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The rising consumer demand for omega-3 rich fish oil supplements has created lucrative opportunities for economically motivated fraud and mislabelling. Stable carbon and hydrogen isotope fingerprinting provides a powerful tool to verify species origin, geographic provenance, and traceability in high-value food products where conventional compositional analysis may fail.
This application note demonstrates how coupling gas chromatography with isotope ratio mass spectrometry and quadrupole mass spectrometry (GC-MS-IRMS) enables simultaneous qualitative, quantitative, and isotope ratio analysis of fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) in fish oils. Thirty salmon oils and forty-three cod liver oils from different regions were profiled to assess the method’s discrimination potential between geographical origins.
Oil samples underwent acid-catalyzed derivatization with CH3COCl in methanol to form FAMEs. A 1 µL liquid injection into the GC separated C14–C22 FAMEs on polar or non-polar columns under precise temperature programs. Carbon (δ13C) and hydrogen (δ2H) isotope ratios of each compound were measured by IRMS. Selected isotope data were processed by discriminant analysis to classify samples by origin.
Carbon isotope values ranged from ‑19.0‰ to ‑33.9‰ (SD<1.1‰) and hydrogen from ‑182‰ to ‑282‰ (SD<3.9‰). Statistical models built on key FAME isotopes (C14:0, C16:0, C16:1, C18:1, C20:5, C22:6) achieved 94.3% correct classification between Norwegian and Chilean salmon and 97.2% between Norwegian and Icelandic Arctic cod. These high prediction rates confirm distinct isotopic signatures aligned with geographic origin.
Continued advancements in multi-isotope analysis platforms and expanded FAME isotope libraries will further refine geographic origin assignments across diverse food matrices. Integration with chemometric algorithms and machine learning could enable real-time authenticity screening. Standardization of global isotope reference databases will support broader regulatory adoption and supply chain transparency.
GC-MS-IRMS coupling proves to be a robust and reliable approach for authenticating fish oils by producing compound-specific carbon and hydrogen isotope fingerprints. The demonstrated high classification accuracy underscores its value for combating adulteration and verifying label claims in premium omega-3 products.
Elemental Analysis, GC/HRMS, GC/MSD
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the topic
The rising consumer demand for omega-3 rich fish oil supplements has created lucrative opportunities for economically motivated fraud and mislabelling. Stable carbon and hydrogen isotope fingerprinting provides a powerful tool to verify species origin, geographic provenance, and traceability in high-value food products where conventional compositional analysis may fail.
Objectives and study overview
This application note demonstrates how coupling gas chromatography with isotope ratio mass spectrometry and quadrupole mass spectrometry (GC-MS-IRMS) enables simultaneous qualitative, quantitative, and isotope ratio analysis of fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) in fish oils. Thirty salmon oils and forty-three cod liver oils from different regions were profiled to assess the method’s discrimination potential between geographical origins.
Methodology
Oil samples underwent acid-catalyzed derivatization with CH3COCl in methanol to form FAMEs. A 1 µL liquid injection into the GC separated C14–C22 FAMEs on polar or non-polar columns under precise temperature programs. Carbon (δ13C) and hydrogen (δ2H) isotope ratios of each compound were measured by IRMS. Selected isotope data were processed by discriminant analysis to classify samples by origin.
Instrumentation used
- Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 Gas Chromatograph
- Thermo Scientific GC IsoLink II Interface
- Thermo Scientific ConFlo IV Universal Interface
- Thermo Scientific DELTA Series Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer
- Thermo Scientific ISQ 7000 Single Quadrupole GC-MS System
- Thermo Scientific TriPlus RSH Autosampler
Main results and discussion
Carbon isotope values ranged from ‑19.0‰ to ‑33.9‰ (SD<1.1‰) and hydrogen from ‑182‰ to ‑282‰ (SD<3.9‰). Statistical models built on key FAME isotopes (C14:0, C16:0, C16:1, C18:1, C20:5, C22:6) achieved 94.3% correct classification between Norwegian and Chilean salmon and 97.2% between Norwegian and Icelandic Arctic cod. These high prediction rates confirm distinct isotopic signatures aligned with geographic origin.
Benefits and practical applications
- Single-injection workflow yields detailed structural and isotopic data, reducing analysis time and sample consumption
- High selectivity and sensitivity support detection of subtle origin differences even among closely related sources
- Robust statistical classification enhances regulatory compliance and quality control in the omega-3 supplement market
- Simultaneous MS and IRMS data allow comprehensive authentication and fraud detection
Future trends and possibilities
Continued advancements in multi-isotope analysis platforms and expanded FAME isotope libraries will further refine geographic origin assignments across diverse food matrices. Integration with chemometric algorithms and machine learning could enable real-time authenticity screening. Standardization of global isotope reference databases will support broader regulatory adoption and supply chain transparency.
Conclusion
GC-MS-IRMS coupling proves to be a robust and reliable approach for authenticating fish oils by producing compound-specific carbon and hydrogen isotope fingerprints. The demonstrated high classification accuracy underscores its value for combating adulteration and verifying label claims in premium omega-3 products.
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