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Development of an Elisa to Detect the Incipient Stages of Tribolium Castaneum in Food Commodities

Srivastava, Roshni (2006) Development of an Elisa to Detect the Incipient Stages of Tribolium Castaneum in Food Commodities. PhD thesis, University of Mysore.

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Abstract

In India, every year nearly 10 per cent of the food grains are lost during post-harvest processing and storage due to insect infestation. Increased production would hardly have any significance unless protected from post harvest loss. A recent estimate by the Ministry of Food and Civil supplies put the total preventable post-harvest losses of food grains due to insect infestation at about 20 million tons per year, which was nearly 10 per cent of the total production that could have fed upto 117 million people for a year. Insect pest activity in agricultural produce may start at any stage from harvest to consumption. Insect infestation causes qualitative and quantitative losses of food commodities and changes the chemical composition affecting the nutritive value of the produce. Insect infestation in food commodities has health implications as well. Insects also play a significant role in the dissemination and proliferation of microorganisms including mycotoxigenic fungi in food commodities. In national and international trade, cash value and marketability of different commodities are affected by insect infestation as are the processing and end-use qualities of food commodities. Quality maintenance by way of reduction in insect contaminants to meet the requirements of International Standards Organisation (ISO) and Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points (HACCP) is important for marketing the produce. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has established Defect Action levels for live insects at two insects per kilogram and insect damaged grains at 32 kernels/100g in food grains; in wheat flour, there is a limit of 75 insect fragments/50g; and in macaroni and noodle products it is 225 fragments in a 225g sample. In India, according to the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act, the uric acid level in food commodities should not exceed 100 mg/kg and the number of weevil-damaged grains should not exceed 10% by count. In countries like Canada and Australia, there is zero tolerance for insects in food grains and a similar standard is followed in international trade for grains. Insect infestation detection methods, in samples and storage facilities, play a significant role as an indicator and also an effective infestation management tool in the food industry. The prominence of current methods used for detection of stored product insect pest such as fragment count, X-ray method, uric acid determination, carbon dioxide analysis, etc. are for the detection of adult or the visible life stages of the insect pest. Nevertheless, insect pest eggs have a key role in spread of infestation. Due to the small size of the eggs, they often go unnoticed and there are not many sufficiently sensitive methods to detect insect pest eggs. Currently, only few methods are available for detection of insect pest eggs like the egg staining techniques and breeding out method. These methods are not sufficiently sensitive; are exclusive in their application; or are time consuming. Sensitive insect pest egg detection technique would be advantageous especially for the milling industry, wherein the milled products of cereals get infested by eggs of insect pests such as Tribolium castaneum,Oryzaephilus surinamensis and Corcyra cephalonica, which gets transferred to the final product thereby reducing the quality of the product and also aiding in the spread of infestation. Therefore, development of sensitive, easy and quick infestation detection methods is imperative. Currently, immunoassays due to their enormous specificity, resolution, rapidity, cost effectiveness and efficiency have gained importance in the field of insect pest detection systems. In view of this, the present work was aimed at the development of a Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) for the detection of incipient stages of the incipient stages of the red flour beetle -Tribolium castaneum, with special reference to eggs. Objectives of the study: 1. Development of ELISA for the detection of incipient and other developmental stages of Tribolium castaneum. a. Purification of the antigen i.e. the major egg protein of Tribolium castaneum Herbst. b. Production of antibodies against the purified antigen in rabbit and chicken. c. Development of the standard ELISA based on the rabbit and chicken egg yolk antibodies. 2. Application of the ELISA developed to food commodities like whole wheat flour and rice flour and testing of market samples. 3. Comparison of the ELISA developed with the current insect pest egg detection methods i.e. AACC approved iodine method and bromocresol green staining method.

Item Type: Thesis (PhD)
Uncontrolled Keywords: food commodities ELISA Tribolium castaneum
Subjects: 600 Technology > 08 Food technology > 21 Cereals
600 Technology > 03 Agriculture > 05 Insect/Pest Control
Divisions: Food Protectants and Infestation Control
Depositing User: Food Sci. & Technol. Information Services
Date Deposited: 06 Jun 2008 07:08
Last Modified: 28 Dec 2011 09:34
URI: http://ir.cftri.res.in/id/eprint/1744

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