| Literature DB >> 31120564 |
Yajun Wu1, Yange Yang1, Minchang Liu1, Bin Wang1, Yingchun Wang1, Hongyue Wang1.
Abstract
DNA barcoding possesses advantages of high resolution, high sensitivity, and capability in capturing as much identity information as possible. However, highly varying sources of food materials and a complicated supply chain bring about challenge to the application of barcoding methods. In this study, different barcode systems were compared to establish a robust method for tracing animal species in food. Experiments on food samples from mammal, poultry, and fish proved that a mini barcode system targeting a 192 bp COI gene fragment was able to accurately identify both raw and highly processed animal food. In order to distinguish species in a mixed food sample, cloning technique was used by which as low as 10% target animal ingredient could be detected. Testing of marketed food products verified the capability of the mini barcoding method in identifying illegally claimed product.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; animal; food; long barcode; mini barcode
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31120564 DOI: 10.1111/1750-3841.14627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Food Sci ISSN: 0022-1147 Impact factor: 3.167