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Tiny devices to feed
advances in food safety and quality
Laboratory testing of agricultural produce in the wake of the food
scares of the 1990s has made the food on European dinner tables
safer than ever before. But, say a team of researchers, an even
better job could be done by taking the laboratory to the farm,
slaughter house or processing plant.
The GoodFood project aims to do just that by using micro and
nanotechnology to develop portable devices to detect toxins,
pathogens and chemicals in foodstuffs on the spot. Food samples
would no longer have to be sent to a laboratory for tests – a
comparatively lengthy and costly procedure – but could be analysed
for safety and quality at the farm, during transport or storage, in
a processing or packaging centre or even in a supermarket.
“The aim is to achieve full safety and quality assurance along the
complete food chain,” explains Carles Cané, the coordinator of the
IST programme-funded project at the National Microelectronics Centre
in Spain.
Sensors used for screening
The tiny biomechanical and microelectronic sensors can be used to
screen for virtually any pathogen or toxin in any produce, although
the project partners are focusing their research on quality and
safety analysis for dairy goods, fruit and wine.
For the dairy sector they are developing a device based on a
fluorescent optical biosensor that measures the reaction of a probe
coated with antibodies when it comes into contact with antibiotics
present in milk or other dairy products. Though the use of
antibiotics as growth enhancers is prohibited in dairy cattle in
Europe, farmers are permitted to employ them to treat ailments
affecting individual animals. These can enter the milk and could
prove harmful to consumers - especially if they end up in baby food
- by creating cumulative resistance to antibiotic treatments.
Checking milk for antibiotic residues is typically carried out with
a non-reusable litmus paper testing kit. An electronic device of the
kind being developed by GoodFood would make the tests faster,
cheaper and more accurate.
The same would be true, the project partners say, if a
microelectronic device is used to detect pathogens such as
salmonella and listeria bacteria in milk, cheese and other dairy
products. The partners are therefore also developing a device using
DNA biochips to detect pathogens - a technique that could also be
applied to determine the presence of different kinds of harmful
bacteria in meat or fish, or fungi affecting fruit. Other sensors
based on an immunodiagnostic microarray will be developed to
identify pesticides on fruit and vegetables.
To date detecting the presence of bacteria or pesticides in
different foodstuffs has only been possible by sending samples,
usually selected at random, to a laboratory and waiting hours or
even days for the results. A portable device would not only
accelerate the testing procedure, but would allow more tests to be
carried out on more produce samples, increasing the overall safety
of the food.
Improving quality as well as safety
Improving food safety is not the only goal of the project, however,
which is also planning to use micro- and nano-sensors to increase
food quality, with evident benefits not just for consumers but also
farmers and processors.
Sensors that measure the quantity of oxygen and ethylene – a gas
produced by fruit as it ripens - in fridges where unripe fruit is
stored for months until it is ready to go on sale would give
suppliers greater control over how well the produce is being
maintained. Employed on the farm, sensors to measure environmental
and climatic conditions would give farmers important information
about their crops, especially when the sensors are connected
wirelessly to an analysis system.
This and other systems developed by the project are being tested
over the course of this year at a vineyard near Florence in Italy
where the grapes due to be harvested in September will have grown
under the watchful eye of the GoodFood sensors.
“Wine making is a precise art and a difference of a few days in when
the grapes are picked can make a huge difference in the quality of
the wine,” the coordinator notes.
With the GoodFood system, the Florence vineyard owner can look
forward to 2006 being an excellent vintage. In the future other
farmers, processors and consumers will also benefit from better and
safer food, with Cané expecting the project's research to lead to
commercial systems, initially for testing and monitoring more
expensive foodstuffs such as wine and baby food and eventually for
other produce.
Contact:
Carles Cané
Centro Nacional de Microelectrónica
Campus UAB
Bellaterra
Spain
Tel: +34-935947700
Mobile: +34 647 418 493
Email: carles.cane@cnm.es
Source: Based on information from GoodFood
SOURCE http://istresults.cordis.lu/
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