4.7 Review

Analytical methods for the detection of viruses in food by example of CCL-3 bioagents

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 404, Issue 9, Pages 2527-2537

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-012-5974-y

Keywords

Norovirus; Hepatitis A; Adenovirus; Enterovirus; Processing; Detection

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This critical review presents challenges and strategies in the detection of viral contaminants in food products. Adenovirus, caliciviruses, enteroviruses, and hepatitis A are emerging contaminant viruses. These viruses contaminate a variety of food products, including fruits, vegetables, shellfish, and ready-to-eat processed foods. The diversity of targets and sample matrices presents unique challenges to virus monitoring that have been addressed by a wide array of processing and detection methods. This review covers sample acquisition and handling, virus recovery/concentration, and the determination of targets using molecular biology and mass-spectrometric approaches. The concentration methods discussed include precipitation, antibody-based concentration, and filtration; the detection methods discussed include microscopy, polymerase chain reaction, nucleic acid sequence-based amplification, and mass spectrometry.

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