不良研究所

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Sometimes, what you eat may not be what you think it is. 

A study of fish DNA, conducted annually by Dominican University biology students, received new attention this year when a local news crew dropped by campus to document the process and, later, the results.

NBC 5 Chicago鈥檚 consumer investigation unit reported in November on the molecular and cellular biology course taught by Dr. Irina Calin-Jageman, in which students followed an intricate process of isolating mitochondrial DNA from uncooked pieces of fish. The extracted DNA samples were then sent to a suburban lab for sequencing.

Following this, the students were able to compare the results to genomic databases and determine the actual species of their fish.

Was the sample really what the restaurant menu or grocery store label indicated? Sometimes it wasn鈥檛鈥 especially when red snapper was on the menu.

In total, 24 of the 84 fish samples tested by students were mislabeled for consumers. Of that 24, all but three were sold at restaurants. Ten samples of fish from multiple sushi restaurants labeled as red snapper were actually tilapia, a less expensive fish, the findings showed. Additionally, seven white and 鈥渟uper white鈥 tuna samples, also from restaurants turned out to be escolar, an oily fish that can cause gastrointestinal illness in some people who consume it.

Two of three samples of shiro maguro, the Japanese term for albacore tuna, were also escolar. Other mislabeled fish included sea bass that turned out to be Patagonian toothfish, an albacore sample that was amberjack and a red snapper from a grocery store that was a different species of snapper.

NBC 5 shared some of these findings in a Nov. 26 report, suggesting that consumers are more likely to get the correct product when buying whole fish, particularly red snapper, from grocery stores.

Dr. Irina Calin-Jageman, left, is interviewed by NBC 5鈥檚 PJ Randhawa about fish DNA extraction conducted by her molecular and cellular biology course.
Students Edgar Huerta and Lesya Davis perform DNA extraction.