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. 2021 Oct 28;26(21):6502. doi: 10.3390/molecules26216502

Table 2.

A summary of advantages and disadvantages of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA in muscle food origin identification.

DNA Advantages Disadvantages
Nuclear Sequence information is conserved and stable [62]. More susceptible to fragmentation in extensive food processing than mitochondrial DNA [70].
Diploidy (suitable for genotyping) [68].
Multiplex species identification at multiple target sites [68].
Enable accurate quantification of meat weight based on the DNA copy number [69].
Contains repetitive sequences (e.g., short interspersed nuclear elements (SINE) and long interspersed nuclear elements (LINE)) which can serve as amplification products, lowering the limit of detection [67].
Mitochondrial High copy number per cell (≈2500 copies) and varies in different tissues [71,72]. Subject to mutation at primer binding region [72].
Higher probability of obtaining positive results in fragmented DNA caused by intense food processing [73].
Relatively higher in mutation rate than nuclear genes (suitable to discriminating closely related species, e.g., chicken vs turkey) [70]. Quantification of meat by transforming copy numbers to the weight proportion of meat is challenging [72].
More resistant to fragmentation by heat compared to nuclear DNA [70].