Quantification of meat proportions by measuring DNA contents in raw and boiled sausages using matrix-Adapted calibrators and multiplex real-Time PCR

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Abstract

The quantification of meat proportions in raw and boiled sausage according to the recipe was evaluated using three different calibrators. To measure the DNA contents from beef, pork, sheep (mutton), and horse, a tetraplex real-time PCR method was applied. Nineteen laboratories analyzed four meat products each made of different proportions of beef, pork, sheep, and horse meat. Three kinds of calibrators were used: raw and boiled sausages of known proportions ranging from 1 to 55% of meat, and a dilution series of DNA from muscle tissue. In general, results generated using calibration sausages were more accurate than those resulting from the use of DNA from muscle tissue, and exhibited smaller measurement uncertainties. Although differences between uses of raw and boiled calibration sausages were small, the most precise and accurate results were obtained by calibration with fine-textured boiled reference sausages. © 2012 Publishing Technology.

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Köppel, R., Eugster, A., Ruf, J., & Rentsch, J. (2012). Quantification of meat proportions by measuring DNA contents in raw and boiled sausages using matrix-Adapted calibrators and multiplex real-Time PCR. Journal of AOAC International, 95(2), 494–499. https://doi.org/10.5740/jaoacint.11-115

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