Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics

Over the last decade, proteomics has been successfully applied to the study of quality control in production processes of food (including meat, wine and beer, transgenic plants and milk) and food safety (screening for food-derived pathogens). Indeed, food quality and safety and their influence on th...

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Main Authors: Angelo D'Alessandro, Lello Zolla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb 2012-01-01
Series:Food Technology and Biotechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/129380
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spelling doaj-d8030b9a3b744832a903360a72b143f02020-11-25T02:26:57ZengUniversity of ZagrebFood Technology and Biotechnology1330-98621334-26062012-01-01503275285Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from ProteomicsAngelo D'Alessandro0Lello Zolla1Department of Ecological and Biological Sciences, DEB, Tuscia University, IT-01100 Viterbo, ItalyDepartment of Ecological and Biological Sciences, DEB, Tuscia University, IT-01100 Viterbo, ItalyOver the last decade, proteomics has been successfully applied to the study of quality control in production processes of food (including meat, wine and beer, transgenic plants and milk) and food safety (screening for food-derived pathogens). Indeed, food quality and safety and their influence on the health of end consumers have growingly become a founding principle in the international agenda of health organizations. The application of proteomics in food science was at first characterized by exploratory analyses of food of various origin (bovine, swine, chicken or lamb meat, but also transgenic food such as genetically modified maize, for example) and beverages (beer, wine), in parallel to the genomic and transcriptomic approaches seeking determination of quantitative trait loci. In the last few years, technical improvements such as microbial biotyping strategies have growingly allowed proteomicists to address the safety issue as well. The newly introduced technical improvements (instrumentation characterized by higher sensitivity such as mass spectrometers) have paved the way for the individuation of food-contaminating pathogens in a fast and efficient workflow which is mandatory in industrial food production chains.http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/129380proteomicsquality controlfood safetynutraceuticals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angelo D'Alessandro
Lello Zolla
spellingShingle Angelo D'Alessandro
Lello Zolla
Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics
Food Technology and Biotechnology
proteomics
quality control
food safety
nutraceuticals
author_facet Angelo D'Alessandro
Lello Zolla
author_sort Angelo D'Alessandro
title Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics
title_short Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics
title_full Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics
title_fullStr Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics
title_full_unstemmed Food Safety and Quality Control: Hints from Proteomics
title_sort food safety and quality control: hints from proteomics
publisher University of Zagreb
series Food Technology and Biotechnology
issn 1330-9862
1334-2606
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Over the last decade, proteomics has been successfully applied to the study of quality control in production processes of food (including meat, wine and beer, transgenic plants and milk) and food safety (screening for food-derived pathogens). Indeed, food quality and safety and their influence on the health of end consumers have growingly become a founding principle in the international agenda of health organizations. The application of proteomics in food science was at first characterized by exploratory analyses of food of various origin (bovine, swine, chicken or lamb meat, but also transgenic food such as genetically modified maize, for example) and beverages (beer, wine), in parallel to the genomic and transcriptomic approaches seeking determination of quantitative trait loci. In the last few years, technical improvements such as microbial biotyping strategies have growingly allowed proteomicists to address the safety issue as well. The newly introduced technical improvements (instrumentation characterized by higher sensitivity such as mass spectrometers) have paved the way for the individuation of food-contaminating pathogens in a fast and efficient workflow which is mandatory in industrial food production chains.
topic proteomics
quality control
food safety
nutraceuticals
url http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/129380
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