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Olive oil DNA fingerprinting by multiplex SNPgenotyping on fluorescent microspheres Despina P. Kalogianni, Christos Bazakos, Lemonia M. Boutsika, Mehdi B. Targem, Theodore K. Christopoulos, Panagiotis Kalaitzis, and Penelope C Ioannou J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/jf5054657 • Publication Date (Web): 10 Mar 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on March 13, 2015
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Olive oil DNA fingerprinting by multiplex SNP-genotyping on fluorescent microspheres
Despina P. Kalogianni1, Christos Bazakos2,3, Lemonia M. Boutsika1, Mehdi Ben Targem2, Theodore K. Christopoulos1,*, Panagiotis Kalaitzis2, and Penelope C. Ioannou4
1
Department of Chemistry, University of Patras, Patras, Greece 26504.
2
Department of
Horticultural Genetics & Biotechnology, Mediterranean Agronomic Institute, Chania (MAICh), Greece 73100. 3Present address: INRA, UMR 1318, Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin, RD10, F78000, Versailles, France. 4Department of Chemistry, University of Athens, Athens, Greece 15771.
*Corresponding author. Phone: (+30)2610 962951
E-mail:
[email protected] ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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ABSTRACT
2
Olive oil cultivar verification is of primary importance for the competitiveness of the
3
product and the protection of consumers and producers from fraudulence. Single
4
nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have emerged as excellent DNA markers for
5
authenticity testing. We report the first multiplex SNP-genotyping assay for olive oil
6
cultivar identification that is performed on a suspension of fluorescence-encoded
7
microspheres. Up to 100 sets of microspheres, with unique ‘fluorescence signatures’,
8
are available. Allele discrimination was accomplished by primer-extension reaction. The
9
reaction products were captured via hybridization on the microspheres and analyzed,
10
within seconds, by a flow-cytometer. The ‘fluorescence signature’ of each microsphere
11
is assigned to a specific allele, whereas the signal from a reporter fluorophore denotes
12
the presence of the allele. As a model, a panel of three SNPs was chosen that enabled
13
identification of five common Greek olive cultivars (Adramytini, Chondrolia Chalkidikis,
14
Kalamon, Koroneiki and Valanolia).
15 16 17 18
KEYWORDS
19
Olea europaea L., Olive oil, varietal origin, genotyping, fluorescence, single-nucleotide
20
polymorphisms, fingerprinting
21
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INTRODUCTION
23
Olive oil is produced from the fruit of Olea europaea L., a tree that is native to the
24
Mediterranean basin.1 Because of its unique taste, flavor and beneficial effects on
25
human health, olive oil is the most expensive edible oil in the market. Olive oil
26
consumption has been constantly growing worldwide. The sensorial characteristics and
27
nutritional properties of olive oil are heavily dependent on the cultivar variety.
28
Monovarietal (single-cultivar) oils of protected designation of origin offer superior quality
29
and therefore have become the center of interest of producers and consumers.2 In fact,
30
the consumers increasingly prefer to purchase certified olive oil from a particular cultivar
31
variety and geographical area.2,3 As a consequence, the verification of the cultivar
32
utilized to produce an olive oil sample is of primary importance in order to enhance the
33
competitiveness of the product and protect both the consumer and the producer by
34
preventing fraudulent practices. The European Union has recognized the differentiation
35
in quality products, such as olive oil, and introduced a new framework for the protection
36
of the geographical origin of the product, according to the EU legislation.4 This
37
legislation permits the labeling of the product as ‘Protected Geographical Indication’
38
(PGI) and ‘Protected Designation of Origin’ (PDO).
39
It should be emphasized that, because of the strong compositional similarities
40
between olive oils obtained from various cultivars, the identification of the cultivar origin
41
is a much more challenging task than the detection of adulteration of olive oil by other
42
vegetable oils.
43
One approach to the classification of the cultivar origin of olive oil entails the
44
characterization of the metabolic profile, including triacyl glycerols, free fatty acids,
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phenols, sterols, various pigments, trace elements etc. Infrared and UV-Vis
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spectroscopy, various chromatographic methods, calorimetry, mass spectrometry,
47
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and a potentiometric electronic tongue have been
48
employed in combination with powerful chemometric tools for the discrimination of the
49
cultivar origin of olive oil.5-10 However, the metabolic profile of olive oil is affected,
50
heavily, by environmental factors (e.g. soil composition and climate conditions),
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extraction methods, stage of ripeness, harvesting time and storage period.11 As a
52
consequence, the metabolite analysis is not sufficient to provide verification of the
53
cultivar.11
54
In recent years, it has been shown that, despite the close similarities between the
55
olive cultivars, the diversity of their DNA sequences is sufficient to allow varietal
56
discrimination. A ‘DNA fingerprint’ is an excellent alternative to metabolic profiling,11
57
because DNA markers are unaffected by the aforementioned factors that influence the
58
metabolite composition and, as a result, they enable unambiguous determination of the
59
cultivar variety of the olive oil sample.12 Moreover, it has been shown that the amount of
60
DNA present in olive oil is adequate for carrying out DNA-based authenticity testing.12,13
61
Various DNA markers have been developed for olive cultivar identification. These
62
include genomic microsatellites,14-16 random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD),17,18
63
inter simple sequence repeat (ISSR) markers,19,20 sequence-characterized amplified
64
regions (SCAR)21 of RAPD products and amplified fragment length polymorphisms
65
(AFLP).22,23 The above methods are based on the comparison of the patterns of DNA
66
fragments separated by gel electrophoresis or capillary electrophoresis in automated
67
systems. More recently, single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have emerged as new
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genetic markers with unique advantages for varietal discrimination.24-27 The progress in
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automated sequencing technology has facilitated greatly the discovery of characteristic
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SNPs for olive cultivars.28,29 The main advantages of SNPs over other genetic markers
71
are: 12,29 (a) SNPs enable to pinpoint very similar cultivars because the differentiation is
72
based on a single-nucleotide change rather than a whole DNA sequence. (b) SNP
73
genotyping can be accomplished even with short amplified DNA sequences (e.g. 100
74
bp). This is particularly important in cases where the integrity of the DNA may be
75
affected during the extraction process and storage of olive oil. (c) SNPs constitute the
76
most abundant genetic markers, (d) they are mainly biallelic and stably inherited.
77
Therefore, the trend is that SNP genotyping will replace the classical genetic markers
78
for cultivar identification. The methods reported so far for SNP genotyping of olive oil
79
DNA include capillary electrophoresis of restriction enzyme-digested DNA fragments25,26
80
and DNA-microarray analysis of ligation reaction products.24 It should be noted,
81
however, that microarrays are suitable for parallel genotyping of thousands of SNPs in
82
one sample, i.e., the SNP-throughput per sample is high but the sample-throughput is
83
low.
84
The proposed method for SNP genotyping is based on a suspension of
85
fluorescent microspheres and, in comparison to the above methods, offers the following
86
advantages. i) High sample-throughput, i.e., compared to microarrays, the method is
87
best suited for genotyping of a small number of useful SNPs in a large number of
88
samples. ii) The suspension of microspheres provides flexibility and convenience in
89
modification and/or expansion of the assay by just replacing sets of microspheres or
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adding more sets of microspheres in the suspension. iii) The microspheres offer rapid
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solution kinetics.
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Previous reports have employed suspension of fluorescent microspheres for the
93
detection and/or quantification of PCR-amplified DNA fragments from food samples.30,31
94
However, to our knowledge, this is the first report of SNP genotyping assays for food
95
authenticity testing using this technological platform.
96
The aim of the present work is the development of a high sample-throughput
97
method for the identification of olive cultivars based on the simultaneous genotyping of
98
single-nucleotide polymorphisms.
99 100
MATERIALS AND METHODS
101
Apparatus and reagents. PCR and primer extension reactions were performed
102
in the MJ Research PTC-0150 thermal cycler (Watertown, MA). The digital camera,
103
Kodak DC 120, and the Gel Analyzer software for DNA documentation were purchased
104
from Kodak (New York, NY). The ultrasonic cleaner from Branson Ultrasonics (Danbury,
105
CT) was used for resuspension of the microspheres. The Luminex 100 IS flow-
106
cytometer (Luminex, Austin, TX) was used for the analysis of the microspheres.
107
Fluorescent carboxylated microspheres (5.6 µm) were purchased from Luminex (Austin,
108
TX). Amplitaq Gold DNA polymerase was from Applied Biosystems (CA, USA) and Vent
109
(exo-) DNA polymerase was from New England Biolabs (Beverly, MA). Ultrapure 2’-
110
deoxyribonucleoside 5’-triphosphates (dNTPs) were purchased from Invitrogen
111
(CarlsBad, CA). KAPA 2G Fast multiplex PCR kit was from Kapa Biosystems (Woburn,
112
MA, USA). Biotin-11-dUTP was from Applichem (Darmstadt, Germany). Streptavidin-R-
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phycoerythrin conjugate (SA-PE) was purchased from Molecular Probes (Eugene, OR).
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The primers and probes used in this study were synthesized by VBC-Biotech (Vienna,
115
Austria). The sequences of the oligonucleotides used throughout this work are listed in
116
Table 1. All other common reagents were from Sigma (St. Louis, MO).
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Experimental Outline. The method includes the following steps: i) DNA
118
isolation, ii) PCR amplification of three DNA segments that contain the 3 SNPs (SNP2,
119
SNP3 and SNP4), iii) multiplex genotyping reaction based on the extension of 6 allele-
120
specific primers, iv) multiplex hybridization assay of the genotyping reaction products on
121
spectrally encoded fluorescent microspheres (Figure 1).
122
Samples and DNA extraction. The Koroneiki and Chondrolia monovarietal extra
123
virgin olive oil samples were provided by Anatoli S.A. Chania, Crete and Makedoniki
124
Elaiourgia S.A. Kalives, Chalkidiki, respectively. The monovarietal olive oil samples of
125
Adramytini, Valanolia and Kalamon were extracted from fruits of the respective cultivars
126
in the pilot olive mill of the Institute of Subtropical Plants and Olive, NAGREF, Chania,
127
Crete. The samples were stored in the dark at room temperature for several months
128
before use. Genomic DNA was extracted from young leaves of five Greek olive varieties
129
(Adramytini, Chondrolia Chalkidikis, Kalamon, Koroneiki and Valanolia) according to the
130
method Saghai-Maroof et al.32 as modified by Angiolillo et al.33 Monovarietal olive oil
131
samples
132
CTAB/hexane/chloroform protocol.34
(500
µL)
were
used
to
extract
genomic
DNA
according
to
the
133
DNA Amplification Protocol A. DNA isolated from olive leaves and oil was
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subjected to two consecutive rounds of amplification (PCR I and PCR II). PCR I was
135
carried out in a total volume of 50 µL containing 15 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 50 mM KCl,
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2.5 mM MgCl2, 200 µM of each dNTP, 0.3 µM of each primer, 1.25 U of Amplitaq Gold
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DNA polymerase and 2 µL of genomic DNA or PCR I product. The cycling conditions for
138
PCR I and PCR II for SNPs 2, 3 and 425 were as follows: 10 min at 95 °C followed by 35
139
cycles (40 cycles for PCR I of olive oil) at 95 °C for 30 s, 50 °C (60 °C for PCR I for
140
SNP2) for 30 s and 72 °C for 30 s. At the end of the cycling, the mixture was held at 72
141
°C for 10 min. A 2-µL aliquot from PCR I of olive oil was used directly in PCR II. The
142
products of PCR I from leaves were first diluted 200 times and a 2-µL aliquot was used
143
as DNA template for PCR II. The PCR II primers (nested primers) were as previously
144
reported.25 The cycling conditions for PCR II were exactly the same as PCR I. The PCR
145
II products were confirmed and quantified by 2% agarose gel electrophoresis and
146
ethidium bromide staining. The PCR I products were 501 bp, 224 bp and 239 bp for
147
SNP2, SNP3 and SNP4, respectively, whereas the PCR II products were 112 bp, 105
148
bp and 137 bp for SNP2, SNP3 and SNP4, respectively.
149
DNA Amplification Protocol B (Multiplex PCR). The multiplex PCR was
150
performed in a final volume of 25 µL containing 12.5 µL of Kapa 2G fast multiplex PCR
151
mix, 0.2 µΜ of each of the PCR II primers for the three SNPs and 2 µL of the isolated
152
DNA. The multiplex PCR conditions were: an initial step at 95 0C for 3 min followed by
153
35 cycles of: 95 °C for 15 s, 50 °C for 30 s and 72 °C for 30 s. A final step at 72 °C for
154
10 min was included. An aliquot of 5 µL of the PCR products were then subjected to a
155
multiplex primer extension reaction and an aliquot of 10 µL of the primer extension
156
products were subjected to a multiple hybridization assay (see below).
157
Allele-Specific Primer Extension Reaction. Each allele-specific primer
158
contained: (a) At the 5’ end, a unique 24-bp oligonucleotide sequence (tag)
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complementary to the anti-tag sequence that was attached to the surface of a specific
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set of fluorescent microspheres. (b) A 12-bp common spacer, and (c) An allele-specific
161
sequence 17-24 bp (Figure 1). Extension reactions were performed in the presence of a
162
mixture of six primers specific for the six alleles of all three SNPs (SNP2, SNP3 and
163
SNP4). The extension reaction was carried out in a total volume of 20 µL containing 20
164
mM Tris–HCl, 10 mM (NH4)2SO4, 10 mM KCl, 0.1% Triton X-100, pH 8.8, 1.5 U Vent
165
(exo-) DNA polymerase, 400 fmol of amplified DNA, 2 pmol of each primer, 2 mM
166
MgSO4, 10 µM of each dATP, dCTP, dGTP, and 10 µΜ biotin-dUTP. The extension
167
reactions were performed in the thermal cycler as follows: 95 oC for 5 min and 40 cycles
168
of 95 oC for 15 s, 58 oC for 15 s, 72 oC for 15 s.
169
Multiplex Hybridization Assay on Spectrally Distinct Microspheres. The
170
extension reaction products (10 µL) were analyzed by a multianalyte hybridization
171
assay, performed in a total volume of 55 µL (Figure 1). A suspension of six sets of
172
spectrally encoded microspheres was prepared for the assay, each set consisting of
173
5000 identical microspheres. Each microsphere was stained with precise amounts of
174
two fluorescent dyes, thus creating a built-in fluorescent signature. Also, anti-tag
175
oligonucleotides were attached on the surface of each microsphere for molecular
176
recognition of the allele-specific extension products. All the microspheres were
177
suspended in the hybridization buffer (100 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 200 mM NaCl and 0.8
178
mL/L Triton X-100) and preheated at 37 °C. The extension reaction products were
179
denatured for 3 min at 95 °C, placed immediately on ice for 2 min and subsequently
180
added to the above mixture and incubated for 1 h at 37 °C. The microspheres were then
181
pelleted by centrifugation at 10000 g for 1 min and washed once with 50 µL of
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hybridization buffer followed by resuspension in 80 µL of hybridization buffer containing
183
250 ng of streptavidin-phycoerythrin conjugate (SA-PE). The mixture was incubated for
184
20 min at room temperature and the microspheres were analyzed by flow-cytometry
185
without prior washing. During the flow-cytometric detection process, each microsphere
186
was irradiated by two laser beams, 635 nm and 532 nm. The 635-nm beam was used
187
for the excitation of the two fluorescent dyes within the microsphere and the ratio of the
188
fluorescence intensities at 658 and 712 nm provided the classification of the
189
microsphere. The 532-nm laser beam was used for the excitation of the reporter
190
molecule, phycoerythrin, and the fluorescence intensity was related to the presence of a
191
specific allele in the sample. At least 100 microspheres of each set were analyzed by
192
the flow-cytometer and the median fluorescence value was calculated (Figure 1).
193
Genotype assignment. The genotype of a sample, for SNPs 2, 3 and 4, was
194
determined as follows: The fluorescence intensity obtained from each set of
195
microspheres was first normalized to scale of 0-100, i.e., it was expressed as a
196
percentage of the maximum fluorescence value of the set. Then, for each SNP, the
197
allelic fraction R=100FA/(FA+FB) was calculated (as a percentage), where FA and FB are
198
the normalized fluorescence values for the alleles A and B of the SNP, respectively. In
199
the presence of allele A only, the value of R is expected to be close to 100, whereas in
200
the absence of allele A (only allele B present) the value of R would be close to zero. If
201
both alleles, A and B, of the SNP are present, then R is about 50.
202 203
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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The olive oil cultivar identification is based on the genotyping of three SNPs, i.e.,
205
SNP2, SNP3 and SNP4, that are located in the plant’s genome giving a unique
206
genotype fingerprint for each variety.25 The SNP database of the 5 Greek olive cultivars
207
is presented in Table 2.25 The principle of the method is illustrated in Figure 1. The
208
method is performed on a suspension of spectrally encoded microspheres in a high
209
sample-throughput and cost-effective format. We used sets of microspheres stained
210
with precise amounts of two spectrally distinct fluorophores, thus providing unique
211
‘fluorescence signatures’ for 100 different sets, which in turn permit the rapid
212
simultaneous genotyping of up to 50 SNPs. Allele discrimination was accomplished
213
through primer-extension reaction. The extension reaction products were captured from
214
the suspension of the microspheres and reacted with a streptavidin-phycoerythrin
215
conjugate. The microspheres were then analyzed, within seconds, by a flow-cytometer.
216
Each microsphere ‘fluorescence signature’ corresponds to a specific allele, whereas the
217
signal of the phycoerythrin reporter denotes the presence of this allele in the sample.
218
The suspension of microspheres allows solution kinetics and great assay flexibility.
219
Biotin-dUTP was incorporated during the extension, and hence the reaction
220
products were labeled with biotin. The products were heat-denatured and allowed to
221
hybridize with a mixture of six sets of microspheres, each set carrying a characteristic
222
anti-tag sequence. The hybrids were detected with a streptavidin-phycoerythrin
223
conjugate. The fluorescence of the microspheres was finally measured by a flow-
224
cytometer.
225 226
As a model, the proposed method was applied to the authentication of 5 olive varieties: Adramytini, Chondrolia Chalkidikis, Kalamon, Koroneiki and Valanolia.
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The PCR amplification yielded fragments with sizes 112 bp, 105 bp and 137 bp
228
for SNP2, SNP3 and SNP4, respectively. The PCR products were subjected to the
229
extension reaction in the presence of six allele-specific primers (two primers per SNP).
230
Several parameters were evaluated for the optimization of the allele-specific
231
primer extension reaction. The concentration of primers was tested in the range of 0.05
232
and 0.1 µΜ. The concentration of dATP, dGTP and dCTP was studied in the range of
233
2.5 to 25 µM of each and the concentration of biotin-dUTP was tested in the range of
234
1.25 to 10 µM. The annealing temperature of the reaction was performed at 50 to 58 oC,
235
as well as the reaction was carried out for 20 to 40 cycles. The optimized conditions are
236
reported in the Materials and Methods section. Finally, the effect of the PCR product
237
purification prior to the PEXT reaction was tested. Several PCR products were treated
238
with exonuclease I and alkaline phosphatase, which hydrolyse the primers and the
239
dNTPs respectively. The treated PCR products were subjected to extension reaction in
240
parallel with untreated products. The untreated products performed the same with
241
treated ones. Optimization studies for hybridization assays on fluorescent microspheres
242
included the effect of the number of microspheres (500-10000) on the signal of the
243
assay, the hybridization time (30 to 120 min), the amount of streptavidin-phycoerythrin
244
conjugate (100-500 ng) and the incubation time for the conjugate (10-30 min). Finally,
245
the volume of the extension reaction mixture used for the multiplex hybridization assay
246
was optimized and 10 µL of the product were sufficient to obtain high fluorescence
247
signal.
248
Synthetic DNA Controls for Olive Varieties. The method was initially evaluated
249
by using synthetic DNA controls representative of each variety. A synthetic control was
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a mixture of single-stranded DNA target sequences (60-mers), each corresponding to
251
an allele (two targets per SNP). The sequences of the synthetic targets are listed in
252
Table 1. Mixtures of the synthetic targets of the three SNPs were prepared, according to
253
the known genotype of each olive variety. Given that the two alleles of each SNP are
254
denoted with the letters A and B, the known genotypes of the five olive varieties for
255
SNP2-SNP3-SNP4 are as follows:25 Adramytini (AD): AA-AB-AA; Chondrolia (CH): AB-
256
AB-AA; Kalamon (KA): AA-AA-AA; Koroneiki (KO): AB-AB-AB; Valanolia (VA): AB-AA-
257
AA. Thus, the combination of the three genotypes provided a unique varietal code.
258
We produced synthetic controls that represent the five olive varieties: Adramytini,
259
Chondrolia, Kalamon, Koroneiki, and Valanolia. The synthetic controls contained 200
260
fmol/µL of each allele in the case of a ‘homozygote’ control of the specific SNP, and 100
261
fmol/µL of each allele in the case of a ‘heterozygote’ control. A 1-µL aliquot of each
262
synthetic control was subjected to a multiple extension reaction using a mixture of 6
263
extension primers, specific for the SNP2, SNP3 and SNP4 alleles. The extension
264
products were subjected to a multiplex hybridization assay with the six sets of
265
microspheres. The genotyping results for the synthetic controls are presented as plots
266
of the allelic fraction R versus the olive variety that corresponds to each synthetic
267
control (Figure 2). A color-code presentation of the SNP2, SNP3 and SNP4 genotypes
268
for the five olive varieties is shown in Figure 2. It is demonstrated that the combination
269
of the three genotypes gives a unique identification code for each variety.
270
Genotyping of Olive Leaves and Olive Oil. The proposed method was applied
271
to the genotyping of DNA samples isolated from leaves and oil of the 5 olive varieties.
272
The olive leaves and fruits used for olive oil production of Adramytini, Valanolia and
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Kalamon were collected from the same olive trees. Adramytini and Valanolia samples
274
were harvested from olive groves in the Lesvos island and Kalamon samples from an
275
olive grove in Chalkidiki. The Koroneiki leaf sample was harvested from the
276
experimental olive grove at MAICh. The Chondrolia leaf and fruit samples were
277
harvested from an olive grove in the Chalkidiki area. The fruits were then transferred for
278
olive oil extraction in the Makedoniki Elaiourgia Company (Greece). The leaf and olive
279
oil DNA samples of all cultivars were characterized accordingly.25 Following PCR, an
280
amount of 400 fmol of amplified DNA was subjected to the multiplex primer extension
281
reaction in the presence of the six allele-specific primers. A volume of 10 µL of the
282
extension products, after heat denaturation for 3 min at 95 oC, was hybridized to a
283
mixture of the six sets of microspheres. The results of the genotyping of the leaf
284
samples are presented in Figure 3. Similarly, the proposed method was applied to the
285
genotyping of DNA isolated from various olive oil samples and the results are presented
286
in Figure 4. We observe that, for each olive variety, the genotypes obtained from the
287
leaf samples and from olive oil samples coincide with those of the synthetic controls.
288
An All-Multiplex Method. An all-multiplex method was developed comprising (a)
289
multiplex PCR amplification, (b) multiplex extension reaction and (c) multiplex
290
hybridization assay. The multiplex PCR of all three SNP segments in a single round of
291
amplification was accomplished by using the Kapa 2G fast DNA polymerase. The
292
genotyping results, presented in Figure 5, show the agreement of the all-multiplex
293
protocol with the single-PCR approach.
294
Reproducibility. The reproducibility of the method was assessed by analyzing
295
DNA samples from Valanolia, Kalamon and Koroneiki. The analyses were performed in
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triplicate and the mean allelic fractions along with their coefficient of variation (%CV)
297
were calculated for each SNP. The results are presented in Table 3. In all cases the
298
reproducibility of the allelic fraction was very good for all three SNPs and genotypes.
299 300
The proposed method can be easily expanded to include more olive varieties
301
since there are 100 sets of commercially available and spectrally distinguishable
302
fluorescent microspheres carrying anti-tag sequences. Given that each set corresponds
303
to an allele the potential of the present method extends to the multiplex genotyping of
304
50 biallelic SNPs. Furthermore, the flexibility of the proposed method arises from the
305
fact that the suspension of microspheres is not a fixed array (as in the case of planar
306
arrays) but it can be easily adapted to specific laboratory needs, since it is convenient to
307
select and mix only those microsphere sets that are relevant to the SNP panel that is
308
used for the interrogation of a particular olive oil sample. Moreover, the PCR products
309
are introduced directly (without prior purification) to a single-tube multiplex primer-
310
extension reaction followed by a single-tube multiplex hybridization of all extension
311
products on the microspheres and flow-cytometric analysis. The flow-cytometric
312
detection is completed within 30 seconds. The method is accurate since the results
313
obtained from the five olive cultivars are in full agreement with previous studies25 that
314
established the genotypes of the 5 olive varieties for SNPs 2, 3 & 4. Moreover, for each
315
cultivar, DNA isolated from leaf samples gave identical genotypes with DNA isolated
316
from olive oil.
317
In our opinion, the proposed high sample-throughput assay will contribute
318
significantly to the traceability and authenticity of olive oil samples. It is expected to be
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particularly useful in an industrial context and in laboratories involved in official control,
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i.e., laboratories that require methods offering high sample-throughput.
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REFERENCES
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(1) Loukas, M.; Krimbas, C.B. History of olive cultivars based on genetic distances. J.
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diversity in the Olive tree (Olea europaea L. subsp. europaea) cultivated in Portugal
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FIGURE CAPTIONS
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Figure 1
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(A) Allele-specific primer extension reaction. Each allele-specific primer consists of a
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segment complementary to the target sequence, a tag sequence at the 5’ end and a 12-
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nt spacer. The two allele-specific primers differ only at the 3’ end nucleotide. Extension
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by DNA polymerase occurs only when the primer anneals to the corresponding allele.
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(B) Hybridization assay on spectrally-encoded fluorescent microspheres. The extension
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reaction products are captured on the surface of the microspheres through hybridization
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with the immobilized anti-tag sequences. The added streptavidin-phycoerythrin
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conjugate binds only to the extended primers that contain biotin moieties. The
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fluorescence of phycoerythrin of each microsphere is measured by flow-cytometry.
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(C) Classification of the fluorescent microspheres by flow-cytometry. The classification
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is based on the fluorescence intensities of the two dyes used for the staining of the
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microspheres. Each cluster represents a set of microspheres. The dots inside the
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cluster are data from at least 100 microspheres.
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Figure 2
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(A) Genotyping results for synthetic controls that represent the five Greek olive
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varieties, that is, Adramytini (AD), Chondrolia Chalkidikis (CH), Kalamon (KA), Koroneiki
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(KO) and Valanolia (VA). For each SNP, an allelic fraction R (expressed as a
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percentage) close to 100 corresponds to the presence of the allele A only, whereas an
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R value close to 50 indicates the presence of both alleles A and B. ‘R 2A’: Allelic
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fraction (percentage) of allele A of SNP2. ‘R 3A’: Allelic fraction (percentage) of allele A
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of SNP3. ‘R 4A’: Allelic fraction (percentage) of allele A of SNP4.
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(B) Color-code for the genotypes of the five olive varieties as assigned by the
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combination of the three SNPs. For each SNP, the green circle shows the presence of
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the allele A only, whereas the yellow circle indicates the presence of both alleles (A and
448
B).
449 450
Figure 3
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Genotyping results obtained from leaf samples of the five olive varieties: Adramytini
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(AD), Chondrolia Chalkidikis (CH), Kalamon (KA), Koroneiki (KO) and Valanolia (VA).
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For each SNP, an allelic fraction R close to 100 corresponds to the presence of the
454
allele A only, whereas an R value close to 50 indicates the presence of both alleles A
455
and B.
456 457
Figure 4
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Genotyping results obtained from olive oil samples of the five cultivars: Adramytini (AD),
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Chondrolia Chalkidikis (CH), Kalamon (KA), Koroneiki (KO) and Valanolia (VA). For
460
each SNP, an allelic fraction R close to 100 corresponds to the presence of the allele A
461
only, whereas an R value close to 50 indicates the presence of both alleles A and B.
462 463
Figure 5
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Genotyping results of the all-multiplex method for the five cultivars: Adramytini (AD),
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Chondrolia Chalkidikis (CH), Kalamon (KA), Koroneiki (KO) and Valanolia (VA). For
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each SNP, an allelic fraction R close to 100 corresponds to the presence of the allele A
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only, whereas an R value close to 50 indicates the presence of both alleles A and B.
468 469
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TABLES Table 1. Oligonucleotide Sequences Oligonucleotide Name
Sequence (5΄ → 3΄)
PCR primers SNP2 Forward 2 PCR I Reverse 2 PCR I Forward 2 PCR II Reverse 2 PCR II
GCAACTCAAATGAATGAATCATGAT CTAACTCGATGGCCGTTTTCTAA GAAAATAACCTGCATTTTCG TATTGCTTGTTGGGTAGAAG
SNP3 Forward 3 PCR I Reverse 3 PCR I Forward 3 PCR II Reverse 3 PCR II
TTCACAGGTAAAATTCTTCTTTCC AACCCTCAGCTGTGCAATCTG TCATTCATGGCATTTATTCTTC CTGGGCAATCCTCTAACACC
SNP4 Forward 4 PCR I Reverse 4 PCR I Forward 4 PCR II Reverse 4 PCR II
TGTTGGTGAACCACTGGATG CAGCAACAAAATCCAGGAAG AGGCGATTGTACGATGCTG TCCCTTTCCGAAAACAACAG
Extension primers tag2A tag2B tag3A tag3B tag4A tag4B
TTACCTTTATACCTTTCTTTTTACCCGTAACTCATTAAGACATATAGCACGTATACCT TACACTTTCTTTCTTTCTTTCTTTCCGTAACTCATTAAGACATATAGCACGTATACCG CTTTATCAATACATACTACAATCACCGTAACTCATTTTCTTCTATTCTCAGTTTTTCTAG CAATTTCATCATTCATTCATTTCACCGTAACTCATTTTCTTCTATTCTCAGTTTTTCTAA TCATCAATCAATCTTTTTCACTTTCCGTAACTCATTCAACCAAACTAATCAAATTAAAAG ATACTACATCATAATCAAACATCACCGTAACTCATTCAACCAAACTAATCAAATTAAAAA
Anti-tags anti-tag2A anti-tag2B anti-tag3A anti-tag3B anti-tag4A anti-tag4B
GTAAAAAGAAAGGTATAAAGGTAA AAAGAAAGAAAGAAAGAAAGTGTA TGATTGTAGTATGTATTGATAAAG TGAAATGAATGAATGATGAAATTG AAAGTGAAAAAGATTGATTGATGA TGATGTTTGATTATGATGTAGTAT
Synthetic Targets Target2A Target2B Target3A Target3B Target4A Target4B
CTGCATTTTCGGGCCATCTTCGGCGACCCAGAAGTAATCAGGTATACGTGCTATATGTCTT CTGCATTTTCGGGCCATCTTCGGCGACCCAGAAGTAATCCGGTATACGTGCTATATGTCTT ACAAAAAGGAAATTGTAAACCAATTAACATGGAAGTCTAGAAAAACTGAGAATAGAAGAA ACAAAAAGGAAATTGTAAACCAATTAACATGGAAGTTTAGAAAAACTGAGAATAGAAGAA ATGCTGTTAATGTCATCCTTTCATTACAGGTATTGAAGCTTTTAATTTGATTAGTTTGGTTG ATGCTGTTAATGTCATCCTTTCATTACAGGTATTGAAGTTTTTAATTTGATTAGTTTGGTTG
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Table 2. SNP Database of the 5 Greek Olive Cultivars. A=Adenine; C=Cytosine; G=Guanine
SNPs SNP2 SNP3 SNP4
Adramytini A/A A/G C/C
Chondrolia Kalamon A/C A/A A/G G/G C/C C/C
Koroneiki A/C A/G C/T
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Table 3. Reproducibility Study.
SNPs
SNP2 SNP3 SNP4
Valanolia Allelic Genotype fraction (Mean) AB 51.9 AA 98.7 AA 99.8
%CV (n=3) 5.2 0.4 0.1
Kalamon Allelic Genotype fraction (Mean) AA 94.2 AA 99.8 AA 99.7
%CV (n=3) 2.5 0.4 0.1
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Koroneiki Allelic Genotype fraction (Mean) AB 48.5 AB 52.3 AB 49.8
%CV (n=3) 4.4 4.0 1.4
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FIGURES
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100
R 4A
A
75
B
50
Genotypes for SNPs 2, 3 & 4
25
2 3 4
0
Adramytini (AD)
100
R 3A
75
Chondrolia (CH)
50 25
Kalamon (KA)
0 100
Koroneiki (KO)
R 2A
75 50
Valanolia (VA)
25 0
AD
CH
KA
KO
VA
Variety
Figure 2
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100
R 4A
75 50 25 0 100
R 3A
75 50 25 0 100
R 2A
75 50 25 0
AD
CH
KA
KO
VA
Variety
Figure 3
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100
R 4A
75 50 25 0 100
R 3A
75 50 25 0 100
R 2A
75 50 25 0
AD
CH
KA
KO
VA
Variety
Figure 4
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100
R 4A
75 50 25 0 100
R 3A
75 50 25 0 100
R 2A
75 50 25 0
AD
CH
KA
KO
VA
Variety
Figure 5
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GRAPHIC FOR TABLE OF CONTENTS
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