Towards metrologically traceable and comparable results in GM quantification

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Abstract

The GM content in a food or feed product produced from or containing genetically modified organisms (GMO) has to be expressed in Europe in the form of a GM mass fraction. However, the most widely used quantification methods, based on PCR, are basically counting PCR-amplifiable DNA fragments in a sample extract. This paper outlines the requirements for obtaining comparable measurement results which are fit for regulatory decision-making. It introduces the concept of a reference measurement system which enables GMO analysis laboratories to relate their results to a universally accessible reference, thus establishing metrological traceability to a unique reference point. The conversion factors required for transforming data from one measurement unit into the other have to carry a minimum uncertainty and are anchored to specified certified reference materials. The establishment of such conversion factors and related calibration approaches to achieve comparable GM quantification results are sketched. [Figure not available: see fulltext.].

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Corbisier, P., & Emons, H. (2019). Towards metrologically traceable and comparable results in GM quantification. Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 411(1), 7–11. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00216-018-1457-0

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