4.7 Article

Discovery of peptide biomarkers by label-free peptidomics for discrimination of horn gelatin and hide gelatin from Cervus nippon Temminck

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 363, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.130347

Keywords

Deer horn gelatin; Deer hide gelatin; Peptide biomarkers; Quality control; Label-free peptidomics

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81973450]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2018YFC1706100]
  3. Jiangsu Qinglan Project
  4. Jiangsu 333 Project
  5. Young Researchers Training Project of China Association of Traditional Chinese Medicine [QNRC2C14]
  6. Open Project of Chinese Materia Medica First-Class Discipline of Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine [2020YLXK009]

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This study identified four peptide biomarkers to distinguish deer horn gelatin (DCG) from deerhide gelatin (DHG) using peptidomics, which were validated and used for adulteration percentage calculation in commercial samples. This strategy may also be useful for the authentication of food gelatins from different tissues of the same species.
Gelatin and gelatin-based derivatives have been attracting worldwide attention as health-food ingredients. Deer horn gelatin (DCG), a well-known and expensive gelatin food in Asia, has suffered adulterants by adding deerhide gelatin (DHG) in it. However, robust and effective methods which could differentiate DCG from DHG are still unavailable. This study is committed to discover peptide biomarkers to distinguish DCG from DHG using label-free peptidomics by nanoLC-MS/MS. Multivariate statistical analysis combined with glycosylation sites analysis of peptides was applied to visualize the difference between DCG and DHG. As a result, four peptide biomarkers for distinguishing DCG and DHG were confirmed and validated by UPLC-MS/MS and MRM mode, which was also used to calculate adulteration percentage in commercial samples. The presented strategy may be also particularly helpful in the in-depth authentication of food gelatins from different tissues of the same species.

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