In Vitro CRISPR-Cpf1 Assay for Differentiation of Fine and Bulk Cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.).
Authors: La-Rostami Farshad, Wax Nils, Druschka Michael, Adams Elena, Albert Chenyang, Fischer Markus
Journal: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (J Agric Food Chem), Vol.70(28), 2022‑Jul‑20
DOI:
10.1021/acs.jafc.2c02537
Abstract
Cocoa cultivation is dominated by the clone "Colleción Castro Naranjal 51" (CCN-51). In contrast, CCN-51 is the expensive and aromatic fine cocoa "Arriba Nacional" from Ecuador. The differences in the overall quality of the beans and in the prices show that it is necessary to develop a rapid and accurate method to distinguish these varieties and prevent food fraud. To this end, we used a CRISPR-Cpf1 assay suitable for AT-rich targets such as the chloroplast genome (cpGenome). SNPs in cocoa plastid genomes were selected to replace the canonical PAM sequence of Cpf1 (5'-TTTV-3'). We developed two assay systems to digest both Arriba and CCN-51. The results were tested qualitatively by agarose gel electrophoresis and quantitatively by capillary gel electrophoresis. Using the assay described here, we were able to reliably detect admixtures of 5% CCN-51 (P < 0.01) and 10% Arriba (P < 0.05). The application to processed cocoa products was also successful.
Publication Types
Journal Article
Keywords
Arriba
CCN-51
Cas12a
Theobroma cacao L.
food fraud
in vitro CRISPR-Cpf1
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