Abstract
In the present work the possibility of using an untargeted metabolomic strategy to discriminate between common and durum wheat lipidome for an authenticity purpose was explored. A first study was conducted by analyzing 52 samples from two durum and common wheat varieties. Afterwards, an extended and independent sample set (173 samples and five varieties) was used as a confirmatory study to verify the stability and consistency of the models obtained. Putatively identified markers were evaluated applying ROC curves resulting in individual marker AUC >90% both in preliminary and confirmatory study. In addition, digalactosyl diglyceride (DGDG) 36:4 was shown to be an effective marker differentiating between authentic durum wheat and its adulterated admixture down to 3% adulteration level, which is the maximum contamination level allowed by Italian legislation. The results demonstrated that untargeted lipidomics, in conjunction with chemometric tools has a significant potential for screening and detection of wheat fraud.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 775-783 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | Food Chemistry |
Volume | 240 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Feb 2018 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- Authenticity
- Common wheat
- Durum wheat
- High-resolution mass spectrometry
- Lipidomics
- Untargeted metabolomics
- Wheat