Lateral flow immunoassay-based absolute point-of-care technique for authentication of meat and commercial meat products

J Food Sci Technol. 2023 Feb;60(2):772-782. doi: 10.1007/s13197-022-05663-2. Epub 2023 Jan 6.

Abstract

Point-of-care (POC) assay is an emerging technique for rapid initial screening of meat fraud incidents in a resource-limited environment. To achieve this goal, a simple extraction protocol is proposed for efficient recovery of meat proteins from raw, heat-processed, and commercial samples as well as meat offals without utilizing sophisticated laboratory settings. A sandwich-format lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA) was developed based on gold nanoparticles as labels and immunoglobulins (IgG and IgY) as biomarkers for meat species identification in raw and cooked meat mixes. The test system showed a sensitivity of 10 ng/mL allowing the detection of as low as 0.063% pork and chicken meat and 0.125% sheep meat (lamb) in meat mixes within 15 min including sample preparation. Reproducibility of the assay was confirmed by the fully consistent intra- and inter-laboratory tests and RT-PCR method. The current study developed a field-deployable extraction technique and highly-specific, sensitive, reproducible, cost-effective, and user-friendly LFIA-based assay for rapid species authentication in raw, cooked, and commercial meat samples and meat offals.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13197-022-05663-2.

Keywords: Commercial meat samples; Extraction protocol; Gold nanoparticles; Immunoglobulins; Lateral flow immunoassay; Point-of-care; Species authentication.