Main Page/Featured article of the month/2020

From CannaQAWiki
Revision as of 17:10, 4 November 2020 by Shawndouglas (talk | contribs) (Added last month's article of the month)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Featured article of the month archive - 2020

Welcome to the CannaQAwiki 2020 archive for the Featured Article of the Month.

Featured article of the month: October:

Fig3 Krill Metabolites2020 10-7.png

"A high-throughput method for the comprehensive analysis of terpenes and terpenoids in medicinal cannabis biomass"

Cannabis and its secondary metabolite content have recently seen a surge in research interest. Cannabis terpenes and terpenoids in particular are increasingly the focus of research efforts due to the possibility of their contribution to the overall therapeutic effect of medicinal cannabis. Current methodology to quantify terpenes in cannabis biomass mostly relies on large quantities of biomass, long extraction protocols, and long gas chromatography (GC) gradient times, often exceeding 60 minutes. They are therefore not easily applicable in the high-throughput environment of a cannabis breeding program. The method presented here, however, is based on a simple hexane extract from 40 mg of biomass, with 50 μg/mL dodecane as internal standard, and a gradient of less than 30 minutes. (Full article...)


Featured article of the month: September:

Fig2 DiNardo Toxins2020 12-4.png

"Enzyme immunoassay for measuring aflatoxin B1 in legal cannabis"

The diffusion of the legalization of cannabis for recreational, medicinal, and nutraceutical uses requires the development of adequate analytical methods to assure the safety and security of such products. In particular, aflatoxins are considered to pose a major risk for the health of cannabis consumers. Among analytical methods that allow for adequate monitoring of food safety, immunoassays play a major role thanks to their cost-effectiveness, high-throughput capacity, simplicity, and limited requirement for equipment and skilled operators. Therefore, a rapid and sensitive enzyme immunoassay has been adapted to measure the most hazardous aflatoxin B1 in cannabis products. (Full article...)