Journal article published in Food Research International, volume 151:110874, pp. 1–9.
Authors:
.Abstract
‘Nebbiolo’ is a well-known grapevine variety used to produce prestigious monovarietal Italian red wines. Genetic traceability is an important tool used to protect the authenticity of high-quality wines. SNP-based assays are an effective method to reach this aim in wines, but several issues have been reported for the authentication of commercial wines. In this study, the impact of the most common commercial additives and processing aids used in winemaking was analysed in ‘Nebbiolo’ wine using SNP-based traceability. Gelatine and bentonite had the strongest impact on the turbidity, colour and phenolic composition of wines and on residual grapevine DNA. The DNA reduction associated with the use of bentonite and gelatine (>99% compared to the untreated control) caused issues in the SNP-based assay, especially when the DNA concentration was below 0.5 pg/mL of wine. This study contributed to explaining the causes of the reduced varietal identification efficiency in commercial wines.
Key words grapevine; wines; oenological additives; Sfursat; genetic traceability; SNPs
BibTeX entry: click to show
@article{ 2318_1826908, url = {https://hdl.handle.net/2318/1826908}, author = {Gambino, Giorgio and Ferrero, Lorenzo and Scalzini, Giulia and De Paolis, Camilla and Paissoni, Maria Alessandra and Río Segade, Susana and Giacosa, Simone and Boccacci, Paolo and Rolle, Luca}, title = {Impact of oenological processing aids and additives on the genetic traceability of ‘Nebbiolo’ wine produced with withered grapes}, year = {2022}, journal = {Food Research International}, volume = {151:110874}, abstract = {‘Nebbiolo’ is a well-known grapevine variety used to produce prestigious monovarietal Italian red wines. Genetic traceability is an important tool used to protect the authenticity of high-quality wines. SNP-based assays are an effective method to reach this aim in wines, but several issues have been reported for the authentication of commercial wines. In this study, the impact of the most common commercial additives and processing aids used in winemaking was analysed in ‘Nebbiolo’ wine using SNP-based traceability. Gelatine and bentonite had the strongest impact on the turbidity, colour and phenolic composition of wines and on residual grapevine DNA. The DNA reduction associated with the use of bentonite and gelatine (>99% compared to the untreated control) caused issues in the SNP-based assay, especially when the DNA concentration was below 0.5 pg/mL of wine. This study contributed to explaining the causes of the reduced varietal identification efficiency in commercial wines.}, keywords = {grapevine; wines; oenological additives; Sfursat; genetic traceability; SNPs}, doi = {10.1016/j.foodres.2021.110874}, pages = {1--9} }
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doi:10.1016/j.foodres.2021.110874
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