Abstract

In order to (1) reduce the risk of intentional or unintentional contamination of foods, (2) better comply with food regulations, and (3) decrease economic loss to the food industry caused by recall, it is necessary to develop reliable methods for the detection of different food adulterants/contaminants. This study was conducted to characterize two mammalian skeletal troponin (sTn) specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs 6G1 and 8F10), and use them to develop a mAb-based sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the detection of mammalian meats. From our results, both mAbs were positive to porcine sTnI and sTnC but negative to sTnT. The extractability and antigenicity of target analytes in pork were enhanced by the addition of urea and β-mercaptoethanol into the extraction buffer. The optimized sandwich ELISA was specific to heated mammalian meats and was adequate to analyze samples subject to the most severe heat treatment (132 °C/2 bar/120 min). Mammalian fat (10–30%, g/g) did not significantly affect the assay signal. The optimized assay could detect as low as 1% (g/g) of heated mammalian meats adulterated in poultry meats. Overall, this assay has the potential to fight food fraud, comply with food regulations, and decrease food recalls, which may open up new diagnostic methods for the food industry and the food regulatory authorities.

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