TY - JOUR
T1 - Overview on Untargeted Methods to Combat Food Frauds
T2 - A Focus on Fishery Products
AU - Fiorino, Giuseppina M.
AU - Garino, Cristiano
AU - Arlorio, Marco
AU - Logrieco, Antonio F.
AU - Losito, Ilario
AU - Monaci, Linda
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Giuseppina M. Fiorino et al.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Authenticity and traceability of food products are of primary importance at all levels of the production process, from raw materials to finished products. Authentication is also a key aspect for accurate labeling of food, which is required to help consumers in selecting appropriate types of food products. With the aim of guaranteeing the authenticity of foods, various methodological approaches have been devised over the past years, mainly based on either targeted or untargeted analyses. In this review, a brief overview of current analytical methods tailored to authenticity studies, with special regard to fishery products, is provided. Focus is placed on untargeted methods that are attracting the interest of the analytical community thanks to their rapidity and high throughput; such methods enable a fast collection of "fingerprinting signals" referred to each authentic food, subsequently stored into large database for the construction of specific information repositories. In the present case, methods capable of detecting fish adulteration/substitution and involving sensory, physicochemical, DNA-based, chromatographic, and spectroscopic measurements, combined with chemometric tools, are illustrated and commented on.
AB - Authenticity and traceability of food products are of primary importance at all levels of the production process, from raw materials to finished products. Authentication is also a key aspect for accurate labeling of food, which is required to help consumers in selecting appropriate types of food products. With the aim of guaranteeing the authenticity of foods, various methodological approaches have been devised over the past years, mainly based on either targeted or untargeted analyses. In this review, a brief overview of current analytical methods tailored to authenticity studies, with special regard to fishery products, is provided. Focus is placed on untargeted methods that are attracting the interest of the analytical community thanks to their rapidity and high throughput; such methods enable a fast collection of "fingerprinting signals" referred to each authentic food, subsequently stored into large database for the construction of specific information repositories. In the present case, methods capable of detecting fish adulteration/substitution and involving sensory, physicochemical, DNA-based, chromatographic, and spectroscopic measurements, combined with chemometric tools, are illustrated and commented on.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85045995811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1155/2018/1581746
DO - 10.1155/2018/1581746
M3 - Review article
SN - 0146-9428
VL - 2018
JO - Journal of Food Quality
JF - Journal of Food Quality
M1 - 1581746
ER -