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Discovery of Spoilage Markers for Chicken Eggs Using Liquid Chromatography-High Resolution Mass Spectrometry-Based Untargeted and Targeted Foodomics

William Chih-Wei Chang, Hsin‐Yi Wu, Hung-Lin Kan, Ying‐Chi Lin, Pei-Jane Tsai, Yun-Chieh Chen, Yu-Yi Pan, Pao‐Chi Liao

2021Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry38 citationsDOI

Abstract

The current approaches remain insufficient for measuring chicken egg spoilage or present analytical limitations. This study aimed to complement the existing analyses and identify novel markers using liquid chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry-based foodomics strategies. In the discovery set, comparative untargeted metabolomics was utilized to identify marker candidates in microbially inoculated chicken eggs. Markers were annotated by spectral matching with authentic standards, experimental libraries, or in silico fragmentation. In the validation set, targeted metabolomics was employed to verify the markers in stored chicken eggs from five farms. Statistical differences at a p-value < 0.001 revealed increases in lactic and 3-hydroxybutyric acids and decreases in phosphocholine, LPE(O-18:1), LPC(16:0), and LPC(18:0) in stored eggs. Receiver operating characteristic curve analysis of the six combined markers yielded an AUC of 0.956 and a sensitivity and specificity of ∼90%. Four phospholipids were highlighted as a novel class of spoilage markers. Our findings may contribute to further industrial implementation, benefiting the quality assurance and food safety of poultry egg production.

Topics & Concepts

MetabolomicsFood spoilageChromatographyMass spectrometryLiquid chromatography–mass spectrometryFood scienceBiologyComputational biologyChemistryBacteriaGeneticsMetabolomics and Mass Spectrometry StudiesAdvanced Chemical Sensor TechnologiesMeat and Animal Product Quality