In this study (purchase required) the authors developed and optimised a species-specific colorimetric based LAMP (loop-mediated isothermal amplification) assay targeting the mitochondrial COI gene of three mussel species: Perna canaliculus, Mytilus galloprovincialis, and Perna virdis . They compared it to conventional PCR assay..
The specificity was tested against non-targeted bivalves and the sensitivity was evaluated by using DNA with concentrations ranging from 3.12 ng/μL to 0.003 ng/μL. In-house validation for cooked mussels was determined by using various conditions of different cooking methods, including boiling , steaming, frying, and canning.
The developed LAMP assay provided accurate results at 63 °C for 30 min when visualized by colorimetric observation and agarose gel electrophoresis. The authors reported that LAMP and PCR showed similar specificity against three non-targeted bivalves while LAMP showed greater sensitivity than PCR for Asian green mussel and New Zealand mussels with the limit of detection 0.003 and 0.01 ng/reaction, respectively. Under optimal thermally processed conditions, both species-specific LAMP and PCR successfully authenticated three commercially important mussel species.
The authors conclude that the colorimetric LAMP assay developed in this study is simple, rapid, and convenient for authenticating mussel products.
For an explanation of LAMP, see FAN’s analytical methods explainers for DNA techniques.
Photo by Christopher Carson on Unsplash
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