Abstract

Poultry meat is consumed worldwide and is prone to food fraud because of large price differences among meat from different poultry species. Precise and sensitive analytical methods are necessary to control poultry meat products. We chose species–specific sequences of the cytochrome b gene to develop two multiplex real-time polymerase chain reaction (real-time PCR) systems: one for chicken (Gallus gallus), guinea fowl (Numida meleagris), and pheasant (Phasianus colchicus), and one for quail (Coturnix japonica) and turkey (Meleagris gallopavo). For each species, added meat could be detected down to 0.5 % w/w. No cross reactions were seen. For these two real-time PCR systems, we applied three different quantification methods: (A) with relative standard curves, (B) with matrix-specific multiplication factors, and (C) with an internal DNA reference sequence to normalize and to control inhibition. All three quantification methods had reasonable recovery rates from 43% to 173%. Method B had more accepted recovery rates, i.e., in the range 70–130%, namely 83% compared to 75% for method A or C.

Highlights

  • This study focused on the quantification of the relative meat content for five poultry species in meat products as poultry is the most consumed meat, and its consumption rate is still growing [24]

  • A deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequence of the mitochondrial genome was obtained from NCBI GenBank for chicken (NC_040970.1), guinea fowl (NC_034374.1), pheasant (NC_015526.1), quail (NC_003408.1), and turkey (NC_034374.1)

  • We compared three different methods to quantify the amount of meat from chicken, guinea fowl, pheasant, quail, or turkey in meat products, cooked at low or high temperatures [24,25,26]

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Summary

Introduction

On one side, this may be due to health, religious, or ideological issues. Consumers are sensitized due to food fraud incidences like the horsemeat scandal [1]. They want to know what they are getting for their money. The easiest information source is the label of ingredients. In the EU, regulation (EU) No 1169/2011 defines what the label should contain and in which order [2]

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