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Food authentication in real life: How to link nontargeted approaches with routine analytics?

期刊

ELECTROPHORESIS
卷 41, 期 20, 页码 1665-1679

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/elps.202000030

关键词

food authenticity; food fraud; food profiling; nontargeted; omics technologies

资金

  1. Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture (BMEL) [2816500914]
  2. Federal Institute for Agriculture and Food (BLE)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In times of increasing globalization and the resulting complexity of trade flows, securing food quality is an increasing challenge. The development of analytical methods for checking the integrity and, thus, the safety of food is one of the central questions for actors from science, politics, and industry. Targeted methods, for the detection of a few selected analytes, still play the most important role in routine analysis. In the past 5 years, nontargeted methods that do not aim at individual analytes but on analyte profiles that are as comprehensive as possible have increasingly come into focus. Instead of investigating individual chemical structures, data patterns are collected, evaluated and, depending on the problem, fed into databases that can be used for further nontargeted approaches. Alternatively, individual markers can be extracted and transferred to targeted methods. Such an approach requires (i) the availability of authentic reference material, (ii) the corresponding high-resolution laboratory infrastructure, and (iii) extensive expertise in processing and storing very large amounts of data. Probably due to the requirements mentioned above, only a few methods have really established themselves in routine analysis. This review article focuses on the establishment of nontargeted methods in routine laboratories. Challenges are summarized and possible solutions are presented.

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