Authentication of Fish Products
by Large-Scale Comparison
of Tandem Mass Spectra
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Abstract
Authentication of food is a major
concern worldwide to ensure that
food products are correctly labeled in terms of which animals are
actually processed for consumption. Normally authentication is based
on species recognition by comparison of selected sequences of DNA
or protein. We here present a new robust, proteome-wide tandem mass
spectrometry method for species recognition and food product authentication.
The method does not use or require any genome sequences or selection
of tandem mass spectra but uses all acquired data. The experimental
steps were performed in a simple, standardized workflow including
protein extraction, digestion, and data analysis. First, a set of
reference spectral libraries was generated using unprocessed muscle
tissue from 22 different fish species. Query tandem mass spectrometry
data sets from “unknown” fresh muscle tissue samples
were then searched against the reference libraries. The number of
matching spectra could unambiguously identify the origin of all fresh
samples. A number of processed samples were also analyzed to further
test the robustness and applicability of the method. The results clearly
show that the method is also able to correctly identify heavily processed
samples