Abstract

The adulteration of meat products by the undeclared addition of commercially available blood plasma powder is quite conceivable due to low costs, high protein contents (about 70%), and advantageous functional properties. This applies particularly to pork, which has the highest meat production rate in the European Union. Evidence of this type of food fraud has been rather difficult to identify due to the lack of appropriate analytical methods, especially when adding plasma to meat of the same animal species. Consequently, a rapid UHPLC-MS/MS method for the detection of porcine blood plasma in emulsion-type pork sausages was developed. After protein extraction and tryptic digestion in a quick and simple one-pot process, species-specific marker peptides for porcine blood cell proteins (four markers) and plasma proteins (12 markers) were measured by UHPLC-MS/MS. Emulsion-type pork sausages were produced from a variety of raw materials that differed in the age or sex of the slaughtered pigs. Sausages were spiked with 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, or 5% meat substitution by one of two plasma powders, or produced as corresponding blank samples, and subjected to different thermal treatments as full or semi-preserves. Four plasma peptides were identified for the overall sample that allowed detection down to 0.7% meat substitution from the sum of their peak areas, with 5% error probability for both false positives and negatives.

Full Text
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