Abstract
Botanical supplements for health enhancement are being increasingly used in the United
States, but no safeguards are formally in place to ensure that they are not contaminated
with non-efficacious or potentially harmful plant material. A molecular approach,
which allows the authentication of botanical ingredients and detection of contaminating
plant material by analyzing the ITS-1 region by PCR-RFLP and subsequent sequencing,
is described. When using starting material from which DNA can be obtained, this method
has the potential for identifying both primary and contaminating plant material in
botanical dietary supplements.
Key words
PCR amplification - alfalfa - red clover - repair reaction - RFLP - dietary supplements
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Ann M. Hirsch
Department of Molecular, Cell and Developmental Biology
University of California
Los Angeles
CA 90095-1606
USA
Telefon: +1-310-206-8673
Fax: +1-310-206-5413
eMail: ahirsch@ucla.edu