Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products

DNA barcoding has been accepted nowadays as a globally accessible tool to delimitate and identify new species, as it can provide accurate and automated species identification through the use of standard gene, Cytochrome oxidase I (COI). As a result, DNA barcoding has become a perfect molecular tool...

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Main Authors: Faisal, G. Ahmad, Siti Azizah, M. N., Darlina, M. N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Syiah Kuala University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724
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spelling ftunivsyiahkuala:oai:jurnal.usk.ac.id:article/1724 2024-09-15T18:33:03+00:00 Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products Faisal, G. Ahmad Siti Azizah, M. N. Darlina, M. N. 2012-11-30 application/pdf https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724 eng eng Syiah Kuala University https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724/1622 https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724 Proceedings of The Annual International Conference, Syiah Kuala University - Life Sciences & Engineering Chapter; Vol 2, No 1 (2012): Life Sciences 2089-208X info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer-reviewed Article 2012 ftunivsyiahkuala 2024-08-22T09:42:27Z DNA barcoding has been accepted nowadays as a globally accessible tool to delimitate and identify new species, as it can provide accurate and automated species identification through the use of standard gene, Cytochrome oxidase I (COI). As a result, DNA barcoding has become a perfect molecular tool to identify fish products and detect wrongly labelled fish in the market as it can identify fish species even without the presenceof complete morphological characteristics. Here we collected samples from sushi restaurants to investigate and identify the precise species identity of raw fish sushi products because most of them were labelled with only common names such as Tuna, Salmon and Butterfish without providing the scientific name of the fishes. Species identities of seven specimens from two sushi restaurants were DNA barcoded utilising the cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene. The data were BLAST with GenBank and BOLD to confirm species identification. The results showed 100% matches that there was nosubstitution and wrongly labelling of species as the Salmon sushi matched the database sequences of Salmo salar, Tuna to Thunnus albacares and Butterfish to Lepidocybium flavobrunneum. The investigation of these fishproduct true identities should be carried out routinely to ensure consumer protection from mislabelling and substitution for a cheaper fishin order to avoid health issuessuch as allergic reaction due to intake of the wronglylabelled product Article in Journal/Newspaper Salmo salar Universitas Syiah Kuala: Jurnal Unsyiah
institution Open Polar
collection Universitas Syiah Kuala: Jurnal Unsyiah
op_collection_id ftunivsyiahkuala
language English
description DNA barcoding has been accepted nowadays as a globally accessible tool to delimitate and identify new species, as it can provide accurate and automated species identification through the use of standard gene, Cytochrome oxidase I (COI). As a result, DNA barcoding has become a perfect molecular tool to identify fish products and detect wrongly labelled fish in the market as it can identify fish species even without the presenceof complete morphological characteristics. Here we collected samples from sushi restaurants to investigate and identify the precise species identity of raw fish sushi products because most of them were labelled with only common names such as Tuna, Salmon and Butterfish without providing the scientific name of the fishes. Species identities of seven specimens from two sushi restaurants were DNA barcoded utilising the cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene. The data were BLAST with GenBank and BOLD to confirm species identification. The results showed 100% matches that there was nosubstitution and wrongly labelling of species as the Salmon sushi matched the database sequences of Salmo salar, Tuna to Thunnus albacares and Butterfish to Lepidocybium flavobrunneum. The investigation of these fishproduct true identities should be carried out routinely to ensure consumer protection from mislabelling and substitution for a cheaper fishin order to avoid health issuessuch as allergic reaction due to intake of the wronglylabelled product
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Faisal, G. Ahmad
Siti Azizah, M. N.
Darlina, M. N.
spellingShingle Faisal, G. Ahmad
Siti Azizah, M. N.
Darlina, M. N.
Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products
author_facet Faisal, G. Ahmad
Siti Azizah, M. N.
Darlina, M. N.
author_sort Faisal, G. Ahmad
title Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products
title_short Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products
title_full Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products
title_fullStr Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products
title_full_unstemmed Utilisation of DNA barcoding for identification of fish products
title_sort utilisation of dna barcoding for identification of fish products
publisher Syiah Kuala University
publishDate 2012
url https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724
genre Salmo salar
genre_facet Salmo salar
op_source Proceedings of The Annual International Conference, Syiah Kuala University - Life Sciences & Engineering Chapter; Vol 2, No 1 (2012): Life Sciences
2089-208X
op_relation https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724/1622
https://jurnal.usk.ac.id/AICS-SciEng/article/view/1724
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