Identification of pasteurized mare milk and powder adulteration with bovine milk using quantitative proteomics and metabolomics approaches

•Proteomics and metabolomics detected mare milk products adulteration down to 0.1%.•Several proteins of osteopontin identified mare milk products adulteration.•Several metabolites of biotin verified the authenticity of mare milk products.•Specific biomarkers for adulteration identification were infl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food Chemistry: X 2024-06, Vol.22, p.101265-101265, Article 101265
Hauptverfasser: Ji, Zhongyuan, Zhang, Junyu, Deng, Chunxia, Guo, Tongjun, Han, Rongwei, Yang, Yongxin, Zang, Changjiang, Chen, Yong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Proteomics and metabolomics detected mare milk products adulteration down to 0.1%.•Several proteins of osteopontin identified mare milk products adulteration.•Several metabolites of biotin verified the authenticity of mare milk products.•Specific biomarkers for adulteration identification were influenced by processing. Adulteration in dairy products presents food safety challenges, driven by economic factors. Processing may change specific biomarkers, thus affecting their effectiveness in detection. In this study, proteomics and metabolomics approaches were to investigate the detection of bovine milk (BM) constituents adulteration in pasteurized mare milk (PMM) and mare milk powder (MMP). Several bovine proteins and metabolites were identified, with their abundances in PMM and MMP increasing upon addition of BM. Proteins like osteopontin (OPN) and serotransferrin (TF) detected adulteration down to 1 % in PMM, whereas these proteins in MMP were utilized to identify 10 % adulteration. Biotin and N6-Me-adenosine were effective in detecting adulteration in PMM as low as 10 % and 1 % respectively, while in MMP, their detection limits extend down to 0.1 %. These findings offer insights for authenticating mare milk products and underscore the influence of processing methods on biomarker levels, stressing the need to consider these effects in milk product authentication.
ISSN:2590-1575
2590-1575
DOI:10.1016/j.fochx.2024.101265