| Literature DB >> 15172483 |
D Mabru1, J P Douet, A Mouton, C Dupré, J M Ricard, B Médina, M Castroviejo, G Chevalier.
Abstract
Canned truffle products labeled Tuber melanosporum, the famous Perigord truffle, may contain other less tasty and cheaper truffle species. To protect consumers from fraud, a PCR DNA-based method was used to unequivocally identify the nature of the product. Several rapid and simple cell lysis procedures, used in conjunction with a commercially available DNA purification kit, were evaluated for their effectiveness in recovering DNA from canned truffle. In parallel, a marker for T. melanosporum was tested on the mitochondrial rDNA. These two techniques were then combined to differentiate T. melanosporum from other truffle species like T. aestivum, T. brumale or T. indicum up to the legal threshold in canned products. These findings not only allow a comparison of the effectiveness of the different DNA extraction methods but also provide a preliminary indication of the specificity and sensitivity of the detection with the mitochondrial marker that might be attainable for truffle species in a quantitative PCR-based analysis method.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15172483 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2003.12.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Food Microbiol ISSN: 0168-1605 Impact factor: 5.277