DNA Barcoding for the Identification and Authentication of Animal Species in Traditional Medicine

Fan Yang(Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China), Fei Ding(Guangdong Pharmaceutical University), Hong Chen(Guangdong Pharmaceutical University), Mingqi He(Guangdong Pharmaceutical University), Shixin Zhu(Guangdong Pharmaceutical University), Xin Ma(Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China), Li Jiang(Ministry of Public Security of the People's Republic of China), Haifeng Li(Guangdong Pharmaceutical University)
Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine
January 1, 2018
Cited by 85Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Animal-based traditional medicine not only plays a significant role in therapeutic practices worldwide but also provides a potential compound library for drug discovery. However, persistent hunting and illegal trade markedly threaten numerous medicinal animal species, and increasing demand further provokes the emergence of various adulterants. As the conventional methods are difficult and time-consuming to detect processed products or identify animal species with similar morphology, developing novel authentication methods for animal-based traditional medicine represents an urgent need. During the last decade, DNA barcoding offers an accurate and efficient strategy that can identify existing species and discover unknown species via analysis of sequence variation in a standardized region of DNA. Recent studies have shown that DNA barcoding as well as minibarcoding and metabarcoding is capable of identifying animal species and discriminating the authentics from the adulterants in various types of traditional medicines, including raw materials, processed products, and complex preparations. These techniques can also be used to detect the unlabelled and threatened animal species in traditional medicine. Here, we review the recent progress of DNA barcoding for the identification and authentication of animal species used in traditional medicine, which provides a reference for quality control and trade supervision of animal-based traditional medicine.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis