Research Team Design Device to Detect Indicators of Rancidity
9/02/2015

 
 
 
In a report conducted by the UC Davis Olive Oil Center, it was found that more than 65% of the extra virgin olive oil on shelves around the US is defective due to poor handling or deliberate adulteration with extraneous, non-beneficial oils.
 
The most prevalent and identifying defect in olive oil is rancidity, indicating the absence of expected health benefits such as antioxidants and polyunsaturated fats.
 
The research team engineered a biosensor capable of quickly and cheaply evaluating rancidity defects in the chemical profile of olive oil, providing both consumers and retailers with a means of ensuring product quality.

The project consisted of four components: Protein Engineering, Electrochemistry, Development of a user friendly potentiostat and signal processing.
 
The research team were able to provide proof of concept for each component of our device. With each component combined, the research team had a fully functional electrochemical biosensor that could distinguish rancid olive oil from fresh olive oil.
 
 
Project at a Glance
~ Approximately 70% of commercially available olive oil is defective due to rancidity or adulteration but is labelled as fresh - a possible ethical violation of consumer rights
 
~ Olive oil exposed to oxidation heat, or sunlight becomes rancid. Rancid olive oil fails to provide important health benefits
 
~  Olive oil producers and distributors may therefore benefit from an inexpensive and rapid means of detecting rancid olive oil
 
~  California has established new state standards to better its quality of olive oil and to establish a marketable reputation for quality
 
~  An inexpensive enzyme-mediated electrode biosensor was developed to detect a profile of aldehydes indicative of rancidity in olive oil
 
~ This reports describes the policy and stakeholder practices issues that guided the development of the biosensor
 
Read the entire Practice and Policy Report, Practical Implications for the Development and Deployment of Engineered Biosensors in Olive Oil Production, primary author Simon Staley and contributors Aaron Cohen, James Lucus, Lucas Murray, Sarah Ritz, Yeonju Song, and Brian Tamsut, OliView, UC Davis iGEM, 16 October 2014 here