Literature DB >> 22061857

Establishment and application of a polymerase chain reaction for the identification of beef.

Z Guoli1, Z Mingguang, Z Zhijiang, O Hongsheng, L Qiang.   

Abstract

A polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based method for the identification of beef by amplification of bovine 1.709 satellite DNA was established. The method not only was able to amplify raw beef DNA, but also cooked or autoclaved meat DNA. The sequence selected for amplification consisted of a 218 bp DNA fragment lying in the 1.709 satellite DNA of bovine. A pair of synthetic oligonucleotides flanking this sequence were used as printers, and genomic DNA extracted from beef samples employed as templates. Each batch of reaction mix contained Taq DNA polymerase, a buffer component, deoxynucleotide triphosphates, genomic DNA template and a pair of bovine oligodeoxynucleotide primers in a final volume of 50 μl. The amplification of bovine DNA was performed by using 33 cycles of denaturation at 94°C (40 s), annealing at 53.5°C (50 s) and extension at 72°C (60 s), with a 7 min extension at 72°C in the last cycles. The amplified products were subjected to rapid electrophoresis in 3% agarose gel and visualized under ultraviolet illumination after ethidium bromide staining. A Hae Ш restriction endonuclease test was done to verify the specificity of the PCR amplification, and the expected DNA fragments were produced. The specificity test demonstrated that this method was positive for bovine, buffalo and yak meat DNA, but negative for equine, sheep, goat, camel, swine, deer and mouse meat DNA, etc. At least 33.6 fg of DNA from raw beef samples and 0.32 pg of DNA from cooked or autoclaved beef samples were detected, respectively, by PCR. We tested 103 beef samples by PCR and obtained 100% correct identification. The method needed only 6 h for detection of meat products of all kinds. The results showed that the PCR method was sensitive, specific, convenient and rapid, so it may be suitable for rapid identification of beef.

Entities:  

Year:  1999        PMID: 22061857     DOI: 10.1016/s0309-1740(98)00116-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Meat Sci        ISSN: 0309-1740            Impact factor:   5.209


  1 in total

1.  Species-specific identification of adulteration in cooked mutton Rista (a Kashmiri Wazwan cuisine product) with beef and buffalo meat through multiplex polymerase chain reaction.

Authors:  M Mansoor Bhat; Mir Salahuddin; Imtiyaz A Mantoo; Sheikh Adil; Henna Jalal; M Ashraf Pal
Journal:  Vet World       Date:  2016-03-03
  1 in total

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