Abstract
We evaluated whether MinION, an inexpensive portable sequencer, can be used to identify the origin of crude drugs derived from animals. Standard and nonstandard crude drugs with different species of origin were examined. In addition, standards mixed with nonstandard samples were used. As a target gene, cytochrome c oxidase I was amplified and sequenced. The fast mode results had a slightly lower match ratio than high-accuracy mode, but the animals of origin were correctly determined by BLAST for all samples. For antler velvet derived from Rangifer tarandus, even when the sequences were aligned based on Cervus elaphus, the animal of origin was determined correctly. Minor contents could be detected from mixtures of two animals, if the mixtures contained at least 19:1 mtDNA when the coverage allele-fraction threshold was 0.05. By contrast, in fast mode, two sequences could not be separated due to the low accuracy of the base-calling for each read. For fieldwork, the species of origin of crude drugs could be identified with only simple DNA extraction and library preparation. Therefore, MinION appears to be a convenient tool for identifying the origins of crude drugs derived from animals.
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