4.7 Article

Authentication of Argan (Argania spinosa L.) Oil Using Novel DNA-Based Approaches: Detection of Olive and Soybean Oils as Potential Adulterants

Journal

FOODS
Volume 11, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/foods11162498

Keywords

argan oil; authenticity; adulterant detection; real-time PCR; quantification; Olea europaea; Glycine max

Funding

  1. FCT (Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia) through projects FCT/CNRST (Portugal/Morocco) [FCT/6460/6/6/2017/S]
  2. FCT (Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia) [UIDB/50006/2020|UIDP/50006/2020]
  3. European Union (EU) through the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER funds) [NORTE-01-0145-FEDER000052]
  4. project SYSTEMIC (Knowledge Hub on Food and Nutrition Security, ERA-Net Cofund ERA-HDHL) [696300]
  5. FCT [2021.03583.CEECIND/CP1662/CT0012, 2021.03670.CEECIND/CP1662/CT0011]
  6. FCT - POPH-QREN (FSE) [SFRH/BD/132462/2017]
  7. FCT - POPH-QREN (MCTES) [SFRH/BD/132462/2017]
  8. Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [SFRH/BD/132462/2017, 2021.03583.CEECIND/CP1662/CT0012, 2021.03670.CEECIND/CP1662/CT0011] Funding Source: FCT

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In this study, real-time PCR methods were developed to detect adulteration of argan oil with olive and soybean oils. The methods were able to quantify the concentrations of adulterants and showed reliable and high-throughput performance.
Argan oil is a traditional product obtained from the fruits of the argan tree (Argania spinosa L.), which is endemic only to Morocco. It is commercialized worldwide as cosmetic and food-grade argan oil, attaining very high prices in the international market. Therefore, argan oil is very prone to adulteration with cheaper vegetable oils. The present work aims at developing novel real-time PCR approaches to detect olive and soybean oils as potential adulterants, as well as ascertain the presence of argan oil. The ITS region, matK and lectin genes were the targeted markers, allowing to detect argan, olive and soybean DNA down to 0.01 pg, 0.1 pg and 3.2 pg, respectively, with real-time PCR. Moreover, to propose practical quantitative methods, two calibrant models were developed using the normalized Delta Cq method to estimate potential adulterations of argan oil with olive or soybean oils. The results allowed for the detection and quantification of olive and soybean oils within 50-1% and 25-1%, respectively, both in argan oil. Both approaches provided acceptable performance parameters and accurate determinations, as proven by their applicability to blind mixtures. Herein, new qualitative and quantitative PCR assays are proposed for the first time as reliable and high-throughput tools to authenticate and valorize argan oil.

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