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1.
Spores of five type B, five type E, and two type F strains of nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum were inoculated into tubes of an anaerobic meat medium plus lysozyme to give approximately 10(6) spores per tube. Sets of tubes were then subjected to a heat treatment, cooled, and incubated at 6, 8, 10, 12, and 25 degrees C for up to 60 days. Treatments equivalent to heating at 65 degrees C for 364 min, 70 degrees C for 8 min, and 75 degrees C for 27 min had little effect on growth and toxin formation. After a treatment equivalent to heating at 85 degrees C for 23 min, growth occurred at 6 and 8 degrees C within 28 to 40 days. After a treatment equivalent to heating at 80 degrees C for 19 min, growth occurred in some tubes at 6, 8, 10, or 12 degrees C within 28 to 53 days and at 25 degrees C in all tubes within 15 days. Following a treatment equivalent to heating at 95 degrees C for 15 mine, growth was detected in some tubes incubated at 25 degrees C for fewer than 60 days but not in tubes incubated at 6 to 12 degrees C. The results indicate that heat treatment of processed foods equivalent to maintenance at 85 degrees C for 19 min combined with storage below 12 degrees C and a shelf life of not more than 28 days would reduce the risk of growth from spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum by a factor of 10(6).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Thermal inactivation of nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum type E spores was investigated in rainbow trout and whitefish media at 75 to 93 degrees C. Lysozyme was applied in the recovery of spores, yielding biphasic thermal destruction curves. Approximately 0.1% of the spores were permeable to lysozyme, showing an increased measured heat resistance. Decimal reduction times for the heat-resistant spore fraction in rainbow trout medium were 255, 98, and 4.2 min at 75, 85, and 93 degrees C, respectively, and those in whitefish medium were 55 and 7.1 min at 81 and 90 degrees C, respectively. The z values were 10.4 degrees C in trout medium and 10.1 degrees C in whitefish medium. Commercial hot-smoking processes employed in five Finnish fish-smoking companies provided reduction in the numbers of spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum of less than 10(3). An inoculated-pack study revealed that a time-temperature combination of 42 min at 85 degrees C (fish surface temperature) with >70% relative humidity (RH) prevented growth from 10(6) spores in vacuum-packaged hot-smoked rainbow trout fillets and whole whitefish stored for 5 weeks at 8 degrees C. In Finland it is recommended that hot-smoked fish be stored at or below 3 degrees C, further extending product safety. However, heating whitefish for 44 min at 85 degrees C with 10% RH resulted in growth and toxicity in 5 weeks at 8 degrees C. Moist heat thus enhanced spore thermal inactivation and is essential to an effective process. The sensory qualities of safely processed and more lightly processed whitefish were similar, while differences between the sensory qualities of safely processed and lightly processed rainbow trout were observed.  相似文献   

3.
Refrigerated processed foods of extended durability rely on a mild heat treatment combined with refrigerated storage to ensure microbiological safety and quality. The principal microbiological safety risk in foods of this type is non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum. In this article the combined effect of mild heat treatment and refrigerated storage on the time to growth and probability of growth from spores of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum is described. Spores of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum (two strains each of type B, E and F) were heated at 90°C for between 0 and 60 min and subsequently incubated at 5°, 10° or 30°C in PYGS broth in the presence or absence of lysozyme. The number of spores that resulted in turbidity depended on the combination of heat treatment, incubation time and incubation temperature they received. Heating at 90°C for 1 or more min ensured a 106 reduction when spores were subsequently incubated at 5°C for up to 23 weeks. Heating at 90°C for 60 min ensured a 106 reduction over 23 weeks when subsequent incubation was at 10°C in the presence of added lysozyme. The same treatment did not reduce the spore population by 106 when subsequent incubation was at 30°C.  相似文献   

4.
Nonproteolytic strains of Clostridium botulinum will grow at refrigeration temperatures and thus pose a potential hazard in minimally processed foods. Spores of types B, E, and F strains were used to inoculate an anaerobic meat medium. The effects of various combinations of pH, NaCl concentration, addition of lysozyme, heat treatment (85 to 95 degrees C), and incubation temperature (5 to 16 degrees C) on time until growth were determined. No growth occurred after spores were heated at 95 degrees C, but lysozyme improved recovery from spores heated at 85 and 90 degrees C.  相似文献   

5.
The heat treatment necessary to inactivate spores of non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum in refrigerated, processed foods may be influenced by the occurrence of lysozyme in these foods. Spores of six strains of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum were inoculated into tubes of an anaerobic meat medium, to give 106 spores per tube. Hen egg white lysozyme (0–50 μg ml-1) was added, and the tubes were given a heat treatment equivalent to 19·8 min at 90°C, cooled, and incubated at 8°, 12°, 16° and 25°C for up to 93 d. In the absence of added lysozyme, neither growth nor toxin formation were observed. A 6–D inactivation was therefore achieved. In tubes to which lysozyme (5–50 μg ml-1) had been added prior to heating, growth and toxin formation were observed. With lysozyme added at 50 μg ml-1, growth was first observed after 68 d at 8°C, 31 d at 12°C, 24 d at 16°C, and 9 d at 25°C. Thus, in these circumstances, a heat treatment equivalent to 19·8 min at 90°C was not sufficient, on its own, to give a 6–D inactivation. A combination of the heat treatment, maintenance at less than 12°C, and a shelf-life not more than 4 weeks reduced the risk of growth of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum by a factor of 106.  相似文献   

6.
Unheated spores of nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum were able to lead to growth in sterile deoxygenated turnip, spring green, helda bean, broccoli, or potato juice, although the probability of growth was low and the time to growth was longer than the time to growth in culture media. With all five vegetable juices tested, the probability of growth increased when spores were inoculated into the juice and then heated for 2 min in a water bath at 80 degrees C. The probability of growth was greater in bean or broccoli juice than in culture media following 10 min of heat treatment in these media. Growth was prevented by heat treatment of spores in vegetable juices or culture media at 80 degrees C for 100 min. We show for the first time that adding heat-treated vegetable juice to culture media can increase the number of heat-damaged spores of C. botulinum that can lead to colony formation.  相似文献   

7.
A process that claims to use a double pasteurization to produce vacuum-packed potatoes for storage at ambient temperature has been evaluated. After the first pasteurization, potatoes are vacuum-packed and stored at 25 degrees-35 degrees C for up to 24 h, which is intended to allow germination of bacterial spores, and are then pasteurized again. When potatoes were inoculated with spores of Clostridium botulinum and subjected to this double-pasteurization process a high proportion of spores remained viable and resulted in growth and formation of toxin within 5-9 d at 25 degrees C. To provide an appropriate reduction in the risk o survival and growth of Cl. botulinum, peeled, vacuum-packed potatoes for storage at ambient temperature should be given a heat treatment equivalent to an F(0)3 process. If they are not given such a heat treatment they should be stored at a temperature below 4 degrees C.  相似文献   

8.
Heat treatment of spores of non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum at 85°C for 120 min followed by enumeration of survivors on a medium containing lysozyme resulted in a 4.1 and 4.8 decimal reduction in numbers of spores of strains 17B (type B) and Beluga (type E), respectively. Only a small proportion of heated spores formed colonies on medium containing lysozyme; this proportion could be increased by treatments designed to increase the permeability of heated spores. The results indicate that the germination system in spores of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum was destroyed by heating, that lysozyme could replace this germination system, and that treatments that increased the permeability of the spore coat could increase the proportion of heated spores that germinated on medium containing lysozyme. These results are important in relation to the assessment of heat-treatments required to reduce the risk of survival and growth of non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum in processed (pasteurized) refrigerated foods for extended storage.  相似文献   

9.
The heat destruction characteristics of Clostridium botulinum spores suspended in tomato juice and phosphate buffer were determined by the survivor curve method with aluminum thermal death time tubes. Two type A strains of C. botulinum and a type B strain were evaluated. Strains A16037 and B15580 were implicated in outbreaks of botulism involving home-canned tomato products. Strain A16037 had a higher heat resistance than either 62A or B15580. The mean thermal resistance (D-values) for A16037 in tomato juice (pH 4.2) were: 115.6 degrees C, 0.4 min; 110.0 degrees C, 1.6 min; and 104.4 degrees C, 6.0 min. The mean D-values for A16037 in Sorensen 0.067 M phosphate buffer (pH 7) were: 115.6 degrees C, 1.3 min; 110.0 degrees C, 4.4 min; and 104.4 degrees C, 17.6 min. At each test temperature, the D-values were approximately three times higher in buffer than in tomato juice. The z-value for C. botulinum A16037 spores in tomato juice was 9.4 degrees C, and in buffer the z-value was 9.9 degrees C. The use of aluminum thermal death time tubes in a miniature retort system makes it possible to determine survivor curves for C. botulinum spores at 121.1 degrees C. This is possible because the lag correction factor for the aluminum tubes is only about 0.2 min, making possible heating times as short as 0.5 min.  相似文献   

10.
The highly potent botulinum neurotoxins are responsible for botulism, a severe neuroparalytic disease. Strains of nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum form neurotoxins of types B, E, and F and are the main hazard associated with minimally heated refrigerated foods. Recent developments in quantitative microbiological risk assessment (QMRA) and food safety objectives (FSO) have made food safety more quantitative and include, as inputs, probability distributions for the contamination of food materials and foods. A new method that combines a selective enrichment culture with multiplex PCR has been developed and validated to enumerate specifically the spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum. Key features of this new method include the following: (i) it is specific for nonproteolytic C. botulinum (and does not detect proteolytic C. botulinum), (ii) the detection limit has been determined for each food tested (using carefully structured control samples), and (iii) a low detection limit has been achieved by the use of selective enrichment and large test samples. The method has been used to enumerate spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum in 637 samples of 19 food materials included in pasta-based minimally heated refrigerated foods and in 7 complete foods. A total of 32 samples (5 egg pastas and 27 scallops) contained spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum type B or F. The majority of samples contained <100 spores/kg, but one sample of scallops contained 444 spores/kg. Nonproteolytic C. botulinum type E was not detected. Importantly, for QMRA and FSO, the construction of probability distributions will enable the frequency of packs containing particular levels of contamination to be determined.Food-borne botulism is a severe and deadly intoxication caused by the consumption of food containing as little as 30 to 100 ng of preformed botulinum neurotoxin (45). More than 2,500 cases of botulism were reported in Europe in 1999 and 2000, with the majority of cases in the east of the continent (44). Currently, 25 to 50 food-borne botulism cases are diagnosed annually in the United States (27). There are seven distinct botulinum neurotoxins (types A to G) and a number of subtypes (6, 26, 45). In view of the potency of the botulinum neurotoxin and the severity of botulism, four phylogenetically distinct bacteria are grouped together as the Clostridium botulinum species, solely on the basis of their ability to form botulinum neurotoxin. The divergence between these four distinct bacteria is strong enough to merit their classification as distinct species and in some cases is significantly greater than that between bacteria belonging to different genera, e.g., Bacillus subtilis and Staphylococcus aureus (7). Two of these bacteria (proteolytic C. botulinum and nonproteolytic C. botulinum) are responsible for the majority of cases of food-borne botulism. Strains of proteolytic C. botulinum produce neurotoxins of type A, B, or F, form spores of high heat resistance, and have a minimum growth temperature of approximately 12°C (39). Strains of nonproteolytic C. botulinum produce neurotoxins of type B, E, or F, form spores of moderate heat resistance, and are able to grow and form toxin at 3°C (18, 48) and are recognized as the major hazard associated with minimally heated refrigerated foods (4, 37, 43, 44, 48). These new foods meet consumer demand for high-quality, convenient foods that are low in preservatives, and sales are presently increasing by about 10% per annum in many countries (3, 47).Quantitative microbiological risk assessment (QMRA) is now established as an important microbiology food safety tool (42). Process risk models have been used to assess the safety of specific foods with respect to nonproteolytic C. botulinum and the food-borne botulism hazard (e.g., 2, 41). These process risk models benefit from high-quality information, including that on the incidence of spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum spores in food materials. The implementation of food safety objectives (FSO) also benefits from the availability of high-quality information on the microbial contamination of foods and food materials (24). This information is most effective in the form of probability distributions rather than as average spore concentrations or other statistics.The difficulty with enumerating nonproteolytic C. botulinum in foods is that there is no effective selective culture medium available. Surveys of the extent of contamination of foods and food materials have used a nonselective enrichment followed by either testing for neurotoxin using a mouse test or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) or testing for the presence of neurotoxin genes using a PCR test (3, 10, 13, 35, 38, 39). This approach, however, is not optimized for nonproteolytic C. botulinum or proteolytic C. botulinum (therefore potentially failing to recover all spores of either organism) and may also not distinguish nonproteolytic C. botulinum from proteolytic C. botulinum. Heating at 80°C for 10 min followed by incubation at 35°C (54) may be reasonably selective for proteolytic C. botulinum, but there is no similar approach for nonproteolytic C. botulinum, although incubation at 28°C (54) may offer an element of selection. It is necessary, therefore, to develop a method to enumerate spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum in food materials that is robust and optimized, as well as sensitive and specific for this particular pathogen (and does not also detect proteolytic C. botulinum). When enumerating bacteria in foods, it is essential to demonstrate the efficiency of the method by verifying that small concentrations (in the present study, spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum) can be detected following addition to test samples.This paper describes the development, validation, and application of a new method to enumerate spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum in foods and in food materials. This method has been designed to generate data for the construction of probability distributions that can be used in QMRA and FSO settings. Most of the effort has been dedicated to the development and evaluation of the enrichment procedure rather than the PCR test, as the PCR test has received much attention from others (e.g., 3, 10, 16, 36, 38). A low-temperature selective-enrichment procedure is described that has been optimized specifically for nonproteolytic C. botulinum over proteolytic C. botulinum and other bacteria. In order to detect low concentrations of spores, large quantities (200 g) of food materials and foods have been tested. Specific detection of neurotoxin genes is achieved by the use of an established multiplex PCR (36), with an internal amplification control now included (25). By the use of a set of control samples inoculated with defined concentrations of spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum, the detection limit has been estimated for each food material and food tested. The method has been used in an extensive survey of raw materials intended for use in pasta ready meals, as well as the final meals themselves. The implications for risk assessment and risk management of chilled foods are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
Heating spores of non-proteolytic strains of Clostridium botulinum at 85°C, followed by enumeration of survivors on a highly nutrient medium indicated a 5 decimal kill in less than 2 min. The inclusion of lysozyme or egg yolk emulsion in the recovery medium substantially increased apparent spore heat-resistance, with as little as 0.1 μg lysozyme/ml sufficient to give an increase in the number of survivors. After heating at 85°C for 2 min between 0.1% and 1% of the spores of 11 strains (5 type B, 4 type E, 2 type F) formed colonies on medium containing 10 μg lysozyme/ml. Enumeration of survivors on a medium containing lysozyme showed that heating at 85°C for 5 min resulted in an estimated 2.6 decimal kill of spores of strain 17B (type B). These findings are important in the assessment of heat-treatments required to ensure the safety with respect to non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum of processed (pasteurized) refrigerated foods for extended storage such as sous-vide foods.  相似文献   

12.
Foodborne botulism is caused by consumption of preformed botulinum neurotoxin, with as little as 30 ng of neurotoxin being potentially lethal. Consumption of minute quantities of neurotoxin-containing food can result in botulism. In view of the severity of foodborne botulism, it is essential that new foods be developed safely without an increase in incidence of this disease. Minimally heated, chilled foods are a relatively new type of food, sales of which are currently increasing by about 10% per annum. These products meet consumer demand for high-quality foods that require little preparation time. Their safety and quality depends on mild heat treatment, chilled storage, restricted shelf life and sometimes on intrinsic properties of the foods. The principal microbiological hazard is nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum, and there is a concern that this may become an emerging issue. A considerable amount of research and development over the last 15 years has underpinned the safe production of commercial, minimally heated, chilled foods with respect to foodborne botulism, and it is essential that safe food continues to be developed. In particular, the desire to use lighter heat processes and a longer shelf life presents a challenge that will only be met by significant developments in quantitative microbiological food safety.  相似文献   

13.
Thermal inactivation of nonproteolytic Clostridium botulinum type E spores was investigated in rainbow trout and whitefish media at 75 to 93°C. Lysozyme was applied in the recovery of spores, yielding biphasic thermal destruction curves. Approximately 0.1% of the spores were permeable to lysozyme, showing an increased measured heat resistance. Decimal reduction times for the heat-resistant spore fraction in rainbow trout medium were 255, 98, and 4.2 min at 75, 85, and 93°C, respectively, and those in whitefish medium were 55 and 7.1 min at 81 and 90°C, respectively. The z values were 10.4°C in trout medium and 10.1°C in whitefish medium. Commercial hot-smoking processes employed in five Finnish fish-smoking companies provided reduction in the numbers of spores of nonproteolytic C. botulinum of less than 103. An inoculated-pack study revealed that a time-temperature combination of 42 min at 85°C (fish surface temperature) with >70% relative humidity (RH) prevented growth from 106 spores in vacuum-packaged hot-smoked rainbow trout fillets and whole whitefish stored for 5 weeks at 8°C. In Finland it is recommended that hot-smoked fish be stored at or below 3°C, further extending product safety. However, heating whitefish for 44 min at 85°C with 10% RH resulted in growth and toxicity in 5 weeks at 8°C. Moist heat thus enhanced spore thermal inactivation and is essential to an effective process. The sensory qualities of safely processed and more lightly processed whitefish were similar, while differences between the sensory qualities of safely processed and lightly processes rainbow trout were observed.  相似文献   

14.
Heating spores of non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum at 85C for 2 min followed by plating on a standard laboratory medium reduced the count of viable spores by a factor of greater than 104. A similar result was obtained when the plating medium was supplemented with juice from courgette, carrot or mung bean sprout. When plating was on media supplemented with hen egg white lysozyme or juice from turnip, swede, flat bean, cabbage or potato, heating at 85C for 10 min did not reduce the viable count by a factor of 104. Thus these vegetable juices increased the measured heat resistance of spores of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum . These findings are relevant to the safety of minimally processed (e.g. sous-vide ) foods.  相似文献   

15.
Assessing true numbers of viable anthrax spores is complex. Optimal heat activation conditions vary with species, media and germinants. Published time/temperature combinations for Bacillus anthracis spores range from 60 degrees C for 1, post-heating counts were less than their pre-heating counterparts on between 71% and 88% of occasions. A high probability was found of viable spore counts differing significantly from counts determined microscopically, with differences of almost 1 log possible. Viable counts were lower than microscopic counts in 15 of 18 tests.  相似文献   

16.
Endospores of proteolytic type B Clostridium botulinum TMW 2.357 and Bacillus amyloliquefaciens TMW 2.479 are currently described as the most high-pressure-resistant bacterial spores relevant to food intoxication and spoilage in combined pressure-temperature applications. The effects of combined pressure (0.1 to 1,400 MPa) and temperature (70 to 120 degrees C) treatments were determined for these spores. A process employing isothermal holding times was established to distinguish pressure from temperature effects. An increase in pressure (600 to 1,400 MPa) and an increase in temperature (90 to 110 degrees C) accelerated the inactivation of C. botulinum spores. However, incubation at 100 degrees C, 110 degrees C, or 120 degrees C with ambient pressure resulted in faster spore reduction than treatment with 600 or 800 MPa at the same temperature. This pressure-mediated spore protection was also observed at 120 degrees C and 800, 1,000, or 1,200 MPa with the more heat-tolerant B. amyloliquefaciens TMW 2.479 spores. Inactivation curves for both strains showed a pronounced pressure-dependent tailing, which indicates that a small fraction of the spore populations survives conditions of up to 120 degrees C and 1.4 GPa in isothermal treatments. Because of this tailing and the fact that pressure-temperature combinations stabilizing bacterial endospores vary from strain to strain, food safety must be ensured in case-by-case studies demonstrating inactivation or nongrowth of C. botulinum with realistic contamination rates in the respective pressurized food and equipment.  相似文献   

17.
A process that claims to use a double pasteurization to produce vacuum-packed potatoes for storage at ambient temperature has been evaluated. After the first pasteurization, potatoes are vacuum-packed and stored at 25°C–35°C for up to 24 h, which is intended to allow germination of bacterial spores, and are then pasteurized again. When potatoes were inoculated with spores of Clostridium botulinum and subjected to this double-pasteurization process a high proportion of spores remained viable and resulted in growth and formation of toxin within 5–9 d at 25°C. To provide an appropriate reduction in the risk of survival and growth of Cl. botulinum , peeled, vacuum-packed potatoes for storage at ambient temperature should be given a heat treatment equivalent to an F03 process. If they are not given such a heat treatment they should be stored at a temperature below 4°C.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of heat treatment on spores of the actinomycete Micromonospora echinospora were investigated. The percentage of culturable spores in untreated spore stocks was found to be approximately 20%. A 60 degrees C treatment of spores in phosphate buffer for 10 min led to an approximately five-fold increase in the number of culturable units. This indicated that a large proportion of the spores were constitutively dormant. Within 10 min and in the absence of an external energy-yielding substrate, the heat treatment was found to stimulate spore respiration suggesting that endogenous storage compounds were being utilized. Heating spores at 70 degrees C shortened the time period required for activation; holding times greater than 10 min, however, resulted in a reduction of culturable cells. Classic thermal death characteristics were seen at temperatures of 80 degrees C and above with D-values of 21.43, 2.67, 0.45 and 0.09 min being recorded at 70, 80, 90 and 100 degrees C, respectively. Spores of this organism, while being weakly heat resistant in comparison with bacterial endospores, are significantly more resistant than vegetative cells.  相似文献   

19.
A specific and sensitive combined selection and enrichment PCR procedure was developed for the detection of Clostridium botulinum types B, E, and F in fecal samples from slaughtered pigs. Two enrichment PCR assays, using the DNA polymerase rTth, were constructed. One assay was specific for the type B neurotoxin gene, and the other assay was specific for the type E and F neurotoxin genes. Based on examination of 29 strains of C. botulinum, 16 strains of other Clostridium spp., and 48 non-Clostridium strains, it was concluded that the two PCR assays detect C. botulinum types B, E, and F specifically. Sample preparation prior to the PCR was based on heat treatment of feces homogenate at 70 degrees C for 10 min, enrichment in tryptone-peptone-glucose-yeast extract broth at 30 degrees C for 18 h, and DNA extraction. The detection limits after sample preparation were established as being 10 spores per g of fecal sample for nonproteolytic type B, and 3.0 x 10(3) spores per g of fecal sample for type E and nonproteolytic type F with a detection probability of 95%. Seventy-eight pig fecal samples collected from slaughter houses were analyzed according to the combined selection and enrichment PCR procedure, and 62% were found to be PCR positive with respect to the type B neurotoxin gene. No samples were positive regarding the type E and F neurotoxin genes, indicating a prevalence of less than 1.3%. Thirty-four (71%) of the positive fecal samples had a spore load of less than 4 spores per g. Statistical analysis showed that both rearing conditions (outdoors and indoors) and seasonal variation (summer and winter) had significant effects on the prevalence of C. botulinum type B, whereas the effects of geographical location (southern and central Sweden) were less significant.  相似文献   

20.
A rapid method for the determination of bacterial fatty acid composition   总被引:10,自引:1,他引:9  
Heat treatment of spores of non-proteolytic strains of Clostridium botulinum at 75–90°C, and enumeration of survivors on a nutrient medium containing lysozyme gave biphasic survival curves. A majority of spores were inactivated rapidly by heating, and the apparent heat-resistance of these spores was similar to that observed by enumeration on medium without lysozyme. A minority of spores showed much greater heat-resistance, due to the fact that the spore coat was permeable to lysozyme, which diffused into the spore from the medium and replaced the heat-inactivated germination system. The proportion of heated spores permeable to lysozyme was between 0.2 and 1.4% for spores of strains 17B (type B) and Beluga (type E), but was about 20% for spores of strain Foster B96 (type E). After treatment of heated spores with alkaline thioglycolate, all were permeable to lysozyme. D-values for heated spores that were permeable to lysozyme (naturally and after treatment with thioglycolate) were: for strain 17B, D85°C, 100 min; D90°C, 18.7 min; D95°C, 4.4 min; for strain Beluga, D85°C, 46 min; D90°C, 11.8 min; D95°C, 2.8 min. The z-values for these spores of strains 17B and Beluga were 7.6°C and 8.3°C.  相似文献   

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