4.7 Article

Identification of markers for tea authenticity assessment: Non-targeted metabolomics of highly similar oolong tea cultivars (Camellia sinensis var. sinensis)

Journal

FOOD CONTROL
Volume 142, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodcont.2022.109223

Keywords

Tea authenticity assessment; Identification; Markers; Non -targeted metabolomics; Chemometric

Funding

  1. Science and Technology program of Guangdong Academy of Agricultural Sciences [202117]
  2. Opening Project of Key Laboratory of Testing and Evaluation for Agroproduct Safety and Quality, Ministry of Agriculture, China [NK201801]

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This study identified potential markers for tea authenticity assessment using non-targeted metabolomics in unique oolong tea cultivars. A classification model based on these markers was developed and successfully discriminated the oolong tea samples. The combination of non-targeted metabolomics and chemometric methods can provide high resolution markers for tea authenticity assessment.
Tea authenticity assessment remains a challenge because of various cultivars and similar chemical profiles among tea cultivars. Unique oolong tea cultivars (YaShiXiang (YSX)) were used as models in the present study to identify potential markers for tea authenticity assessment via non-targeted metabolomics. With chemometric analysis, a total of ten markers were found to differ significantly among YSX and the high similarity cultivar tea samples, which were up-regulated in YSX. Based on the ten markers, classification model for discrimination of YSX were developed with different combinations of markers. All models were able to classify YSX samples correctly (93.0%-100% for internal cross-validation; 80.5%-99.0% for external validation). The simultaneous determination of metabolites in this study suggested that a combination of non-targeted metabolomics and chemometric methods could provide high resolution markers for tea authenticity assessment, and which can serve as a basis for further quality evaluation and breeding of tea cultivars in the future.

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