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Rapid evaporative ionization mass spectrometry for high-throughput screening in food analysis: The case of boar taint

  • Kaat Verplanken
  • , Sarah Stead
  • , R Jandova
  • , Christof Van Poucke
  • , Jan Claereboudt
  • , Julie Vanden Bussche
  • , S De Saeger
  • , Zoltan Takats
  • , J Wauters
  • , Lynn Vanhaecke

    Research output: Contribution to journalA1: Web of Science-articlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Boar taint is a contemporary off-odor present in meat of uncastrated male pigs. As European Member States intend to abandon surgical castration of pigs by 2018, this off-odor has gained a lot of research interest. In this study, rapid evaporative ionization mass spectrometry (REIMS) was explored for the rapid detection of boar taint in neck fat. Untargeted screening of samples (n=150) enabled discrimination between sow, tainted and untainted boars. The obtained OPLS-DA models showed excellent classification accuracy, i.e. 99% and 100% for sow and boar samples or solely boar samples, respectively. Furthermore, the obtained models demonstrated excellent validation characteristics (R2(Y)=0.872-0.969; Q2(Y)=0.756-0.917), which were confirmed by CV-ANOVA (p<0.001) and permutation testing. In conclusion, in this work for the first time highly accurate and high-throughput (<10s) classification of tainted and untainted boar samples was achieved, rendering REIMS a promising technique for predictive modelling in food safety and quality applications.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTalanta
    Volume169
    Pages (from-to)30-36
    ISSN0039-9140
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1-Jul-2017

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