Back to Search Start Over

Detection of genetically modified corn (Bt176) in spiked cow blood samples by polymerase chain reaction and immunoassay methods.

Authors :
Petit L
Baraige F
Bertheau Y
Brunschwig P
Diolez A
Duhem K
Duplan MN
Fach P
Kobilinsky A
Lamart S
Schattner A
Martin P
Source :
Journal of AOAC International [J AOAC Int] 2005 Mar-Apr; Vol. 88 (2), pp. 654-64.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The fate of DNA and protein transgenic sequences in products derived from animals fed transgenic crops has recently raised public interest. Sensitive molecular tests targeting the Bt176 genetic construct and the transgenic Cry1Ab protein were developed to determine whether plant sequences, especially transgenic sequences, are present in animal products. A protocol for total DNA extraction and purification from cow whole blood samples was first drawn up and assessed by spiking with known amounts of DNA from Bt176 maize. The limit of detection for transgenic sequences (35S promoter and Bt176-specific junction sequence) was determined by both the polymerase chain reaction-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (PCR-ELISA) and the 5'-nuclease PCR assay. Four additional PCR systems were built to substantiate the results. The first detects a mono-copy maize-specific sequence (ADH promoter). Two others target multi-copy sequences from plant nucleus (26S rRNA gene) and chloroplast (psaB gene). The last one, used as a positive control, targets a mono-copy animal sequence (alpha(s1)-casein gene). Both methods detected a minimum spiking at 25 copies of Bt176 maize/mL in 10 mL whole blood samples. The sandwich ELISA kit used detected down to 1 ng transgenic Cry1Ab protein/mL spiked whole blood.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1060-3271
Volume :
88
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of AOAC International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15861534