Litcius/Paper detail

DNA barcoding: a modern age tool for detection of adulteration in food

Nazish Nehal, Bharti Choudhary, Anand Nagpure, Rajinder K. Gupta

2021Critical Reviews in Biotechnology103 citationsDOI

Abstract

Globalization of the food trade requires precise and exact information about the origin, methods of production, transformation technologies, authentication, and the traceability of foodstuffs. New challenges in food supply chains such as deliberate fraudulent substitution, tampering or mislabeling of food and its ingredients or food packaging incapacitates the market and eventually the national economy. Currently, no proper standards have been established for the authentication of most of the food materials. However, in order to control food fraud, various robust and cost-effective technologies have been employed, like a spectrophotometer, GC-MS, HPLC, and DNA barcoding. Among these techniques, DNA barcoding is a biotechnology advantage with the principle of using 400–800 bp long standardized unique DNA sequences of mitochondrial (e.g. COI) or plastidial (e.g. rbcL) of nuclear origin (e.g. ITS) to analyze and classify the food commodities. This review covers several traded food commodities like legumes, seafood, oils, herbal products, spices, fruits, cereals, meat, and their unique barcodes which are critically analyzed to detect adulteration or fraud. DNA barcoding is a global initiative and it is being accepted as a global standard/marker for species identification or authentication. The research laboratories and industries should collaborate to realize its potential in setting standards for quality assurance, quality control, and food safety for different food products.

Topics & Concepts

TraceabilityAuthentication (law)BiotechnologyDNA barcodingBusinessFood safetyFood qualityFood securityQuality (philosophy)Food industrySupply chainFood productsFood marketIdentification (biology)Food processingBiologyFood scienceComputer scienceAgricultureMarketingComputer securityBotanyEvolutionary biologyEcologySoftware engineeringPhilosophyEpistemologyIdentification and Quantification in FoodIsotope Analysis in EcologySpectroscopy and Chemometric Analyses