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1.
In previous studies workers determined that two lactic acid bacterium isolates, Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis C-1-92 and Enterococcus durans 152 (competitive-exclusion bacteria [CE]), which were originally obtained from biofilms in floor drains, are bactericidal to Listeria monocytogenes or inhibit the growth of L. monocytogenes both in vitro and in biofilms at 4 to 37°C. We evaluated the efficacy of these isolates for reducing Listeria spp. contamination of floor drains of a plant in which fresh poultry is processed. Baseline assays revealed that the mean numbers of Listeria sp. cells in floor drains sampled on six different dates (at approximately biweekly intervals) were 7.5 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 8, 4.9 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 3, 4.4 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 2, 4.1 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 4, 3.7 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 1, and 3.6 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 6. The drains were then treated with 107 CE/ml in an enzyme-foam-based cleaning agent four times in 1 week and twice a week for the following 3 weeks. In samples collected 1 week after CE treatments were applied Listeria sp. cells were not detectable (samples were negative as determined by selective enrichment culture) for drains 4 and 6 (reductions of 4.1 and 3.6 log10 CFU/100 cm2, respectively), and the mean numbers of Listeria sp. cells were 3.7 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 8 (a reduction of 3.8 log10 CFU/100 cm2), <1.7 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 1 (detectable only by selective enrichment culture; a reduction of 3.3 log10 CFU/100 cm2), and 2.6 log10 CFU/100 cm2 for drain 3 (a reduction of 2.3 log10 CFU/100 cm2). However, the aerobic plate counts for samples collected from floor drains before, during, and after CE treatment remained approximately the same. The results indicate that application of the two CE can greatly reduce the number of Listeria sp. cells in floor drains at 3 to 26°C in a facility in which fresh poultry is processed.  相似文献   

2.
The thermotolerances of two different cell forms of Listeria monocytogenes (serotype 4b) grown at 37 and 42.8°C in commercially pasteurized and laboratory-tyndallized whole milk (WM) were investigated. Test strains, after growth at 37 or 42.8°C, were suspended in WM at concentrations of approximately 1.5 × 108 to 3.0 × 108 cells/ml and were then heated at 56, 60, and 63°C for various exposure times. Survival was determined by enumeration on tryptone-soya-yeast extract agar and Listeria selective agar, and D values (decimal reduction times) and Z values (numbers of degrees Celsius required to cause a 10-fold change in the D value) were calculated. Higher average recovery and higher D values (i.e., seen as a 2.5- to 3-fold increase in thermotolerance) were obtained when cells were grown at 42.8°C prior to heat treatment. A relationship was observed between thermotolerance and cell morphology of L. monocytogenes. Atypical Listeria cell types (consisting predominantly of long cell chains measuring up to 60 μm in length) associated with rough (R) culture variants were shown to be 1.2-fold more thermotolerant than the typical dispersed cell form associated with normal smooth (S) cultures (P ≤ 0.001). The thermal death-time (TDT) curves of R-cell forms contained a tail section in addition to the shoulder section characteristic of TDT curves of normal single to paired cells (i.e., S form). The factors shown to influence the thermoresistance of suspended Listeria cells (P ≤ 0.001) were as follows: growth and heating temperatures, type of plating medium, recovery method, and cell morphology. Regression analysis of nonlinear data can underestimate survival of L. monocytogenes; the end point recovery method was shown to be a better method for determining thermotolerance because it takes both shoulders and tails into consideration. Despite their enhanced heat resistance, atypical R-cell forms of L. monocytogenes were unable to survive the low-temperature, long-time pasteurization process when freely suspended and heated in WM.  相似文献   

3.
Protective cultures can be used successfully as an additional hurdle together with phages to reduce growth of Listeria monocytogenes on sliced cooked ham. Addition of phages resulted in a rapid 10-fold reduction of L. monocytogenes. After 14 to 28 days of storage, a 100-fold reduction was observed in samples with phages and protective culture compared to results for samples with phages alone.Listeriosis in Europe has an average incidence between 2 and 10 reported cases per million population per year (7). Listeria monocytogenes is found in raw and ready-to-eat (RTE) products, poultry, seafood, and dairy products. A review of the incidence and transmission of L. monocytogenes in RTE products has been published by Lianou and Sofos (11). The USDA has implemented a “zero-tolerance” policy for L. monocytogenes in RTE products (2). In the European Union, the limit for common RTE foods is 100 CFU/g (1). Recently, Codex Alimentarius adopted new standards for L. monocytogenes in RTE foods, with a limit of 100 CFU/g in foods where L. monocytogenes cannot grow and absence in foods where the bacterium can grow. However, an alternative approach is accepted. Competent authorities may choose to establish and implement other validated limits (http://www.codexalimentarius.net/web/archives.jsp?lang=en, Alinorm 09/32/REP and Alinorm 09/32/13). L. monocytogenes in cooked products is connected with cross-contamination after heat treatment (11, 12). Bacteriophages have been successfully applied to a number of food products to reduce the level of contaminating L. monocytogenes (6, 8-10, 13, 14). The effect of phages varies with the type of product and is strongly dose dependent (6, 8). Active phages can be recovered from foods after long storage, but the phage particles appear to become immobilized soon after addition to nonliquid foods and therefore, due to limited diffusion, cannot infect bacteria (8). Bacteria surviving phage treatment can later grow in the product. Additional hurdles should therefore be present to inhibit later outgrowth of L. monocytogenes.We have previously employed Lactobacillus sakei TH1 as a protective culture against L. monocytogenes (4, 5). Here we examine the combined use of phages and protective culture to reduce outgrowth of L. monocytogenes on cooked ham.Rifampin (rifampicin)-resistant mutants of L. monocytogenes 2230/92 serotype 1, implicated in a listeriosis outbreak in Norway (12), and L. monocytogenes 167 serotype 4b were grown overnight in brain heart infusion (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, MI) at 37°C without shaking and stored at 4°C for 24 h (3-5). Cells were diluted in 0.9% NaCl and plated on brain heart infusion agar with 200 μg/ml rifampin. L. sakei TH1 was grown at 30°C in MRS (de Man, Rogosa, Sharpe) broth (CM 359; Oxoid, Hampshire, England) (pH 6.2) and plated on MRS agar (5). Listex P100 phages, 2 × 1011 PFU/ml, were from EBI Food Safety (Wageningen, The Netherlands).Ten-gram slices of hams with 2.3% NaCl and 0.01% disodium diphosphate (pH 6.2; aw > 0.97), made at Nofima''s pilot plant (Aas, Norway), were inoculated with a cold-adapted 1:1 mixture of L. monocytogenes 2230/92 and 167. Bacteria were spread in 100 μl 0.9% NaCl over the 80-cm2 surface area of each slice to 103 CFU/cm2 using a bent glass rod. After 1 h at 20°C, phages (5 × 107 PFU/cm2 in a total volume of 100 μl) were spread over the same surface. After one additional hour, 103 CFU/cm2 L. sakei TH1 in 100 μl 0.9% NaCl was added where appropriate. The slices were vacuum packed and stored at 10°C. Growth was measured before and after spiking and at 0, 3, 7, 14, and 28 days after homogenizing the slices in 100 ml 0.9% NaCl in a Stomacher homogenizer. No lactic acid bacteria were detected in uninoculated samples. Experiments were performed with three parallel samples. L. monocytogenes alone grew from 104 CFU/g at the onset of the experiment to 107 CFU/g the first 7 days, reached 2 × 108 CFU/g after 14 days, and remained unchanged thereafter (Fig. (Fig.1).1). In samples with both L. monocytogenes and phages, a rapid 1-log reduction in L. monocytogenes was observed. Surviving L. monocytogenes, however, grew as well as that in the phage-free controls, reaching >107 CFU/g after 14 days. In samples where both P100 phages and L. sakei TH1 were added, the same initial reduction of L. monocytogenes was observed, but the later outgrowth was reduced by the fast-growing lactic acid bacteria and the L. monocytogenes levels were 2 logs lower than those with P100 phages alone after 28 days of incubation. The phages did not influence the growth and survival of L. sakei TH1. During the 28 days of storage, the pH changed from 6.20 to 6.05 in samples with L. monocytogenes and to 6.00 in samples with both L. monocytogenes and L. sakei TH1. The results were reproduced in a separate repetition of the experiment at 10°C (not shown).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Inhibition of L. monocytogenes in cooked ham with bacteriophages and protective culture at 10°C. Sliced ham was inoculated with 103 CFU/cm2 (corresponding to approximately 104 CFU/g) L. monocytogenes (⧫), L. monocytogenes and 5 × 107 PFU/cm2 P100 phages (▪), or L. monocytogenes, 5 × 107 PFU/cm2 P100 phages, and 103 CFU/cm2 (approximately 104 CFU/g) protective-culture L. sakei TH1 (▴) and stored at 10°C. Growth of L. sakei TH1 is shown by the broken line.The effect of the protective culture was dose dependent when 104 CFU/g and 106 CFU/g of L. sakei TH1 were added to slices of ham (Fig. (Fig.2).2). L. monocytogenes alone grew to 2 × 108 CFU/g after 14 days. When L. sakei TH1 was added at a low concentration (104 CFU/g), L. monocytogenes grew to approximately 4 × 106 CFU/g, while when L. sakei TH1 was added at a high concentration, L. monocytogenes levels were 1 to 2 logs lower. The pHs in the low- and high-inoculum hams were reduced from the initial 6.20 to 6.16 and 6.02, respectively, at day 28. For hams stored at 4°C, slow growth of L. monocytogenes occurred between days 14 and 28 from 104 to 105 CFU/g (P = 0.003) (Fig. (Fig.3).3). With phages and L. sakei TH1 added, a rapid 1-log reduction of L. monocytogenes was observed due to the phage attack, and no growth was observed during the 28-day storage period. The L. sakei TH1 strain showed a longer lag phase at this low temperature but nevertheless reached 107 CFU/g at day 14 and thereby inhibited any growth of L. monocytogenes.Open in a separate windowFIG. 2.Inhibition of L. monocytogenes in cooked ham inoculated with large or small amounts of protective culture at 10°C. Sliced ham was inoculated with 103 CFU/cm2 (corresponding to approximately 104 CFU/g) L. monocytogenes (⧫), L. monocytogenes and 106 CFU/g (105 CFU/cm2) L. sakei TH1 (▴), or L. monocytogenes and 104 CFU/g (103 CFU/cm2) L. sakei TH1 (▪) and stored at 10°C. Growth of L. sakei TH1 is shown by broken lines. The L. monocytogenes control is the same control as in Fig. Fig.11.Open in a separate windowFIG. 3.Inhibition of L. monocytogenes in cooked ham with bacteriophages and protective culture at 4°C. Sliced ham was inoculated with 103 CFU/cm2 (corresponding to approximately 104 CFU/g) L. monocytogenes (⧫) or L. monocytogenes, 5 × 107 PFU/cm2 P100 phages, and 104 CFU/g (103 CFU/cm2) protective-culture, L. sakei TH1 (▴) and stored at 4°C. Growth of L. sakei TH1 is shown by the broken line.Since L. sakei TH1 grows well at low temperatures, prevents growth of L. monocytogenes, and has no negative influence on the organoleptic properties of ham (4, 5), it can successfully be employed as an additional hurdle together with phages.We here chose to perform the storage experiments under “worst-case” conditions. Generally, the contamination levels of L. monocytogenes are lower than in our setup, in the range of 10 to 100 CFU/g (see reference 11 and references therein). Since L. sakei TH1 grows well at low temperatures (Fig. (Fig.3),3), its selective advantage will be greater at 4°C than at abuse temperatures. From the above, it is evident that it is possible to optimize L. monocytogenes inhibition by increasing both the phage titer and the starting amount of protective culture. An enhanced effect may also be experienced by modifying phage application, e.g., by using larger liquid volumes (6, 8).Emergence of resistant L. monocytogenes may be a potential problem when treating foods with phages. No emergence of resistance has been detected after phage treatment (6, 8). Such strategies as use of phage mixtures, phage rotation schemes, and treatment of products immediately prior to packaging may reduce eventual resistance problems (8). Some L. monocytogenes strains are naturally phage resistant (6). In these cases, a protective culture still constitutes a powerful hurdle.In conclusion, we have shown here that by applying phages and protective culture as two independent hurdles, it is possible to both reduce the number of L. monocytogenes bacteria on a product and inhibit outgrowth of eventual remaining surviving cells. This is a general method that can potentially be applied to different foods where there is a potential risk for growth of L. monocytogenes, provided a suitable protective culture is available.  相似文献   

4.
Conditions that resulted in unstable expression and heat instability of a cell surface epitope associated with a 66-kDa antigen in Listeria monocytogenes serotypes were identified with the probe monoclonal antibody (MAb) EM-7G1 in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. This epitope appeared to be absent in three serotypes (serotypes 3b, 4a, and 4c), which did not react with MAb EM-7G1 irrespective of the enrichment broth tested. The remaining 10 serotypes were detected by MAb EM-7G1 only when cells were grown in nonselective brain heart infusion broth (BHI) or selective Listeria enrichment broth (LEB). When cells were grown in Listeria repair broth (LRB), only 6 of the 13 serotypes were detected by MAb EM-7G1, and recognition of serogroup 4 was completely lost. None of the 13 serotypes was detected by MAb EM-7G1 when cells were grown in two other commonly used Listeria-selective media, UVM1 broth and Fraser broth (FRB), indicating that possible loss of epitope expression occurred under these conditions. MAb EM-7G1 maintained species specificity without cross-reacting with live or heat-killed cells of six other Listeria spp. (Listeria ivanovii, Listeria innocua, Listeria seeligeri, Listeria welshimeri, Listeria grayi, and Listeria murrayi) irrespective of the enrichment conditions tested. Due to heat instability of the cell surface epitope when it was exposed to 80 or 100°C for 20 min, MAb EM-7G1 is suitable for detection of live cells of L. monocytogenes in BHI or LEB but not in LRB, UVM1, or FRB enrichment medium.  相似文献   

5.
Depending on its composition and metabolic activity, the natural flora that may be established in a meat plant environment can affect the survival, growth, and acid tolerance response (ATR) of bacterial pathogens present in the same niche. To investigate this hypothesis, changes in populations and ATR of inoculated (105 CFU/ml) Listeria monocytogenes were evaluated at 35°C in water (10 or 85°C) or acidic (2% lactic or acetic acid) washings of beef with or without prior filter sterilization. The model experiments were performed at 35°C rather than lower (≤15°C) temperatures to maximize the response of inoculated L. monocytogenes in the washings with or without competitive flora. Acid solution washings were free (<1.0 log CFU/ml) of natural flora before inoculation (day 0), and no microbial growth occurred during storage (35°C, 8 days). Inoculated L. monocytogenes died off (negative enrichment) in acid washings within 24 h. In nonacid (water) washings, the pathogen increased (approximately 1.0 to 2.0 log CFU/ml), irrespective of natural flora, which, when present, predominated (>8.0 log CFU/ml) by day 1. The pH of inoculated water washings decreased or increased depending on absence or presence of natural flora, respectively. These microbial and pH changes modulated the ATR of L. monocytogenes at 35°C. In filter-sterilized water washings, inoculated L. monocytogenes increased its ATR by at least 1.0 log CFU/ml from days 1 to 8, while in unfiltered water washings the pathogen was acid tolerant at day 1 (0.3 to 1.4 log CFU/ml reduction) and became acid sensitive (3.0 to >5.0 log CFU/ml reduction) at day 8. These results suggest that the predominant gram-negative flora of an aerobic fresh meat plant environment may sensitize bacterial pathogens to acid.  相似文献   

6.
Biofilms from drains in food processing facilities with a recent history of no detectable Listeria monocytogenes in floor drains were cultured for microorganisms producing antilisterial metabolites. A total of 413 microbial isolates were obtained from 12 drain biofilm samples and were assayed at 15 and 37°C for activities that were bactericidal or inhibitory to L. monocytogenes, by two agar plate assays. Twenty-one of 257 bacterial isolates and 3 of 156 yeast isolates had antilisterial activity. All 24 isolates which produced metabolites inhibitory to L. monocytogenes were assayed for antilisterial activity in coinoculated broth cultures containing tryptic soy broth with yeast extract (TSB-YE). A five-strain mixture of 103 CFU of L. monocytogenes/ml and 105 CFU of the candidate competitive-exclusion microorganism/ml was combined in TSB-YE and incubated at 37°C for 24 h, 15°C for 14 days, 8°C for 21 days, and 4°C for 28 days. Substantial inhibition of L. monocytogenes growth (4 to 5 log CFU/ml) was observed for nine bacterial isolates at 37°C, two at 15 and 8°C, and three at 4°C. The inhibitory isolates were identified as Enterococcus durans (six isolates), Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis (two isolates), and Lactobacillus plantarum (one isolate). The anti-L. monocytogenes activity of these isolates was evaluated in biofilms of L. monocytogenes on stainless steel coupons at 37, 15, 8, and 4°C. Results revealed that two isolates (E. durans strain 152 and L. lactis subsp. lactis strain C-1-92) were highly inhibitory to L. monocytogenes (growth inhibition of >5 log10 CFU of L. monocytogenes/cm2). These two bacterial isolates appear to be excellent competitive-exclusion candidates to control L. monocytogenes in biofilms at environmental temperatures of 4 to 37°C.  相似文献   

7.
The efficacy of electrolyzed oxidizing water for inactivating Escherichia coli O157:H7, Salmonella enteritidis, and Listeria monocytogenes was evaluated. A five-strain mixture of E. coli O157:H7, S. enteritidis, or L. monocytogenes of approximately 108 CFU/ml was inoculated in 9 ml of electrolyzed oxidizing water (treatment) or 9 ml of sterile, deionized water (control) and incubated at 4 or 23°C for 0, 5, 10, and 15 min; at 35°C for 0, 2, 4, and 6 min; or at 45°C for 0, 1, 3, and 5 min. The surviving population of each pathogen at each sampling time was determined on tryptic soy agar. At 4 or 23°C, an exposure time of 5 min reduced the populations of all three pathogens in the treatment samples by approximately 7 log CFU/ml, with complete inactivation by 10 min of exposure. A reduction of ≥7 log CFU/ml in the levels of the three pathogens occurred in the treatment samples incubated for 1 min at 45°C or for 2 min at 35°C. The bacterial counts of all three pathogens in control samples remained the same throughout the incubation at all four temperatures. Results indicate that electrolyzed oxidizing water may be a useful disinfectant, but appropriate applications need to be validated.  相似文献   

8.
A quantitative method based on a real-time PCR assay to enumerate Listeria monocytogenes in biofilms was developed. The specificity for L. monocytogenes of primers targeting the listeriolysin gene was demonstrated using a SYBR Green I real-time PCR assay. The number of L. monocytogenes detected growing in biofilms was 6 × 102 CFU/cm2.  相似文献   

9.
Resistance to the quaternary ammonium disinfectant benzalkonium chloride (BC) may be an important contributor to the ability of Listeria spp. to persist in the processing plant environment. Although a plasmid-borne disinfectant resistance cassette (bcrABC) has been identified in Listeria monocytogenes, horizontal transfer of these genes has not been characterized. Nonpathogenic Listeria spp. such as L. innocua and L. welshimeri are more common than L. monocytogenes in food processing environments and may contribute to the dissemination of disinfectant resistance genes in listeriae, including L. monocytogenes. In this study, we investigated conjugative transfer of resistance to BC and to cadmium from nonpathogenic Listeria spp. to other nonpathogenic listeriae, as well as to L. monocytogenes. BC-resistant L. welshimeri and L. innocua harboring bcrABC, along with the cadmium resistance determinant cadA2, were able to transfer resistance to other nonpathogenic listeriae as well as to L. monocytogenes of diverse serotypes, including strains from the 2011 cantaloupe outbreak. Transfer among nonpathogenic Listeria spp. was noticeably higher at 25°C than at 37°C, whereas acquisition of resistance by L. monocytogenes was equally efficient at 25 and 37°C. When the nonpathogenic donors were resistant to both BC and cadmium, acquisition of cadmium resistance was an effective surrogate for transfer of resistance to BC, suggesting coselection between these resistance attributes. The results suggest that nonpathogenic Listeria spp. may behave as reservoirs for disinfectant and heavy metal resistance genes for other listeriae, including the pathogenic species L. monocytogenes.  相似文献   

10.
Food-borne Listeria monocytogenes is a serious threat to human health, and new strategies to combat this opportunistic pathogen in foods are needed. Bacteriophages are natural enemies of bacteria and are suitable candidates for the environmentally friendly biocontrol of these pathogens. In a comprehensive set of experiments, we have evaluated the virulent, broad-host-range phages A511 and P100 for control of L. monocytogenes strains Scott A (serovar 4b) and WSLC 1001 (serovar 1/2a) in different ready-to-eat (RTE) foods known to frequently carry the pathogen. Food samples were spiked with bacteria (1 × 103 CFU/g), phage added thereafter (3 × 106 to 3 × 108 PFU/g), and samples stored at 6°C for 6 days. In liquid foods, such as chocolate milk and mozzarella cheese brine, bacterial counts rapidly dropped below the level of direct detection. On solid foods (hot dogs, sliced turkey meat, smoked salmon, seafood, sliced cabbage, and lettuce leaves), phages could reduce bacterial counts by up to 5 log units. Variation of the experimental conditions (extended storage over 13 days or storage at 20°C) yielded similar results. In general, the application of more phage particles (3 × 108 PFU/g) was more effective than lower doses. The added phages retained most of their infectivity during storage in foods of animal origin, whereas plant material caused inactivation by more than 1 log10. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that virulent broad-host-range phages, such as A511 and P100, can be very effective for specific biocontrol of L. monocytogenes in contamination-sensitive RTE foods.  相似文献   

11.
Interaction of Listeria monocytogenes with mammalian intestinal cells is believed to be an important first step in Listeria pathogenesis. Transposon (Tn916) mutagenesis provided strong evidence that a 104-kDa surface protein, designated the Listeria adhesion protein (LAP), was involved in adherence of L. monocytogenes to a human enterocyte-like Caco-2 cell line (V. Pandiripally, D. Westbrook, G. Sunki, and A. Bhunia, J. Med. Microbiol. 48:117–124, 1999). In this study, expression of LAP in L. monocytogenes at various growth temperatures (25, 37, and 42°C) and in various growth phases was determined by performing an enzyme-linked immunoassay (ELISA) and Western blotting with a specific monoclonal antibody (monoclonal antibody H7). The ELISA and Western blot results indicated that there was a significant increase in LAP expression over time only at 37 and 42°C and that the level of LAP expression was low during the exponential phase and high during the stationary phase. In contrast, there were not significant differences in LAP expression between the exponential and stationary phases at 25°C. Examination of the adhesion of L. monocytogenes cells from exponential-phase (12-h) or stationary-phase (24-h) cultures grown at 37°C to Caco-2 cells revealed that there were not significant differences in adhesion. Although expression of L. monocytogenes LAP was different at different growth temperatures and in different growth phases, enhanced expression did not result in increased adhesion, possibly because only a few LAP molecules were sufficient to initiate binding to Caco-2 cells.  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to establish which of seven factors influence the adhesion strength and hence bacterial transfer between biofilms containing Listeria monocytogenes (pure and two-species biofilms) and tryptone soya agar (TSA) as a solid organic surface. The two-species biofilms were made of L. monocytogenes and one of the following species of bacteria: the nonpathogenic organisms Kocuria varians, Pseudomonas fluorescens, and Staphylococcus sciuri and CCL 63, an unidentified gram-negative bacterium isolated from the processing plant environment. We used biofilms prepared under conditions simulating open surfaces in meat-processing sites. The biofilm's adhesion strength and population were evaluated by making 12 contacts on a given whole biofilm (4.5 cm2), using a new slice of a sterilized TSA cylinder for each contact, and plotting the logarithm CFU · cm−2 detached by each contact against the contact number. Three types of detachment kinetics were observed: biphasic kinetics, where the first slope may be either positive or negative, and monophasic kinetics. The bacteria that resisted a chlorinated alkaline product and a glutaraldehyde- and quaternary ammonium-based disinfectant had greater adhesion strengths than those determined for untreated biofilms. One of the four non-Listeria strains studied, Kocuria varians CCL 56, favored both the attachment and detachment of L. monocytogenes. The stainless steel had smaller bacterial populations than polymer materials, and non-Listeria bacteria adhered to it less strongly. Our results helped to evaluate measures aimed at controlling the immediate risk, linked to the presence of a large number of CFU in a foodstuff, and the delayed risk, linked to the persistence of L. monocytogenes and the occurrence of slightly contaminated foods that may become dangerous if L. monocytogenes multiplies during storage. Cleaning and disinfection reduce the immediate risk, while reducing the delayed risk should be achieved by lowering the adhesion strength, which the sanitizers used here cannot do at low concentrations.  相似文献   

13.
Spray drying of skim milk was evaluated as a means of preserving Lactobacillus paracasei NFBC 338 and Lactobacillus salivarius UCC 118, which are human-derived strains with probiotic potential. Our initial experiments revealed that NFBC 338 is considerably more heat resistant in 20% (wt/vol) skim milk than UCC 118 is; the comparable decimal reduction times were 11.1 and 1.1 min, respectively, at 59°C. An air outlet temperature of 80 to 85°C was optimal for spray drying; these conditions resulted in powders with moisture contents of 4.1 to 4.2% and viable counts of 3.2 × 109 CFU/g for NFBC 338 and 5.2 × 107 CFU/g for UCC 118. Thus, L. paracasei NFBC 338 survived better than L. salivarius UCC 118 during spray drying; similar results were obtained when we used confocal scanning laser microscopy and LIVE/DEAD BacLight viability staining. In addition, confocal scanning laser microscopy revealed that the probiotic lactobacilli were located primarily in the powder particles. Although both spray-dried cultures appeared to be stressed, as shown by increased sensitivity to NaCl, bacteriocin production by UCC 118 was not affected by the process, nor was the activity of the bacteriocin peptide. The level of survival of NFBC 338 remained constant at ~1 × 109 CFU/g during 2 months of powder storage at 4°C, while a decline in the level of survival of approximately 1 log (from 7.2 × 107 to 9.5 × 106 CFU/g) was observed for UCC 118 stored under the same conditions. However, survival of both Lactobacillus strains during powder storage was inversely related to the storage temperature. Our data demonstrate that spray drying may be a cost-effective way to produce large quantities of some probiotic cultures.  相似文献   

14.
We determined the variations in the surface physicochemical properties of Listeria monocytogenes Scott A cells that occurred under various environmental conditions. The surface charges, the hydrophobicities, and the electron donor and acceptor characteristics of L. monocytogenes Scott A cells were compared after the organism was grown in different growth media and at different temperatures; to do this, we used microelectrophoresis and the microbial adhesion to solvents method. Supplementing the growth media with glucose or lactic acid affected the electrical, hydrophobic, and electron donor and acceptor properties of the cells, whereas the growth temperature (37, 20, 15, or 8°C) primarily affected the electrical and electron donor and acceptor properties. The nonlinear effects of the growth temperature on the physicochemical properties of the cells were similar for cells cultivated in two different growth media, but bacteria cultivated in Trypticase soy broth supplemented with 6 g of yeast extract per liter (TSYE) were slightly more hydrophobic than cells cultivated in brain heart infusion medium (P < 0.05). Adhesion experiments conducted with L. monocytogenes Scott A cells cultivated in TSYE at 37, 20, 15, and 8°C and then suspended in a sodium chloride solution (1.5 × 10−1 or 1.5 × 10−3 M NaCl) confirmed that the cell surface charge and the electron donor and acceptor properties of the cells had an influence on their attachment to stainless steel.  相似文献   

15.
This study was designed to investigate the individual and combined effects of mustard flour and acetic acid in the inactivation of food-borne pathogenic bacteria stored at 5 and 22°C. Samples were prepared to achieve various concentrations by the addition of acetic acid (0, 0.5, or 1%) along with mustard flour (0, 10, or 20%) and 2% sodium chloride (fixed amount). Acid-adapted three-strain mixtures of Escherichia coli O157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes, and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium strains (106 to 107 CFU/ml) were inoculated separately into prepared mustard samples stored at 5 and 22°C, and samples were assayed periodically. The order of bacterial resistance, assessed by the time required for the nominated populations to be reduced to undetectable levels against prepared mustards at 5°C, was S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (1 day) < E. coli O157:H7 (3 days) < L. monocytogenes (9 days). The food-borne pathogens tested were reduced much more rapidly at 22°C than at 5°C. There was no synergistic effect with regard to the killing of the pathogens tested with the addition of 0.5% acetic acid to the mustard flour (10 or 20%). Mustard in combination with 0.5% acetic acid had less bactericidal activity against the pathogens tested than did mustard alone. The reduction of E. coli O157:H7 and L. monocytogenes among the combined treatments on the same storage day was generally differentiated as follows: control < mustard in combination with 0.5% acetic acid < mustard alone < mustard in combination with 1% acetic acid < acetic acid alone. Our study indicates that acidic products may limit microbial growth or survival and that the addition of small amounts of acetic acid (0.5%) to mustard can retard the reduction of E. coli O157:H7 and L. monocytogenes. These antagonistic effects may be changed if mustard is used alone or in combination with >1% acetic acid.  相似文献   

16.
The influence of cold stress at 4 and 0°C on the detection time as assessed by impedance technology (Bactometer; Biomérieux, Marcy l’Etoile, France) of different enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) strains was determined. Although there is some variation in susceptibility among EHEC strains, prolonged exposure of EHEC to cold stress, i.e., 4 and 5 days at 4 and 0°C, respectively, in general significantly increased their detection time. This reflects an increase of the lag-phase time caused by cold stress. Two EHEC strains were selected to determine the minimum preliminary enrichment time that would ensure a positive PCR detection of low numbers of verotoxin-producing E. coli (VTEC; 2 to 2 × 105 CFU/25 g) inoculated into ground beef (25 g) and stored at 4 or −20°C for 8 and 14 days, respectively. Incubation times of 6 and 9 h of 1 to 10 CFU/g and 1 to 10 CFU/25 g, respectively, were sufficient for PCR detection of VTEC in ground beef when analysis was performed immediately after inoculation (no cold stress). When cells are exposed to cold stress (4 or −20°C) a 24-h enrichment period is recommended. Restriction of enrichment time to 9 h under these circumstances decreases the sensitivity of PCR detection to 80 CFU/g. Hence, to obtain maximum sensitivity, PCR detection of VTEC in naturally contaminated ground beef should be performed after 24 h of enrichment.  相似文献   

17.
Listeria monocytogenes is a food-borne pathogen that has been implicated in many outbreaks associated with ready-to-eat products. Listeria adjusts to various stresses by adjusting its membrane fluidity, increasing the uptake of osmoprotectants and cryoprotectants, and activating the σB stress factor. The present work examines the regulation of membrane fluidity through direct measurement based on fluorescent anisotropy. The membrane fluidities of L. monocytogenes Scott A, NR30, wt10403S, and cld1 cells cultured at 15 and 30°C were measured at 15 and 30°C. The membrane of the cold-sensitive mutant (cld1) was more rigid than the membranes of the other strains when grown at 30°C, but when grown at 15°C, it was able to adjust its membrane to approach the rigidity of the other strains. The difference in rigidities, as determined at 15 and 30°C, was greater in liposomes than in whole cells. The rates of fluidity adjustment and times required for whole cells to adjust to a different temperature were similar among strains but different from those of liposomes. This suggests that the cells had a mechanism for homeoviscous adaptation that was absent in liposomes.  相似文献   

18.
Three kinds of lactic acid bacteria were isolated from spoiling cooked meat products stored below 10°C. They were identified as Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. mesenteroides, Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis, and Leuconostoc citreum. All three strains grew well in MRS broth at 10°C. In particular, L. mesenteroides subsp. mesenteroides and L. citreum grew even at 4°C, and their doubling times were 23.6 and 51.5 h, respectively. On the other hand, although the bacteria were initially below the detection limit (<10 CFU/g) in model cooked meat products, the bacterial counts increased to 108 CFU/g at 10°C after 7 to 12 days.  相似文献   

19.
Plasmid pSt04 of Streptococcus thermophilus contains a gene encoding a protein with homology to small heat shock proteins (A. Geis, H. A. M. El Demerdash, and K. J. Heller, Plasmid 50:53-69, 2003). Strains cured from the shsp plasmids showed significantly reduced heat and acid resistance and a lower maximal growth temperature. Transformation of the cloned shsp gene into S. thermophilus St11 lacking a plasmid encoding shsp resulted in increased resistance to incubation at 60°C or pH 3.5 and in the ability to grow at 52°C. A food-grade cloning system for S. thermophilus, based on the plasmid-encoded shsp gene as a selection marker, was developed. This approach allowed selection after transfer of native and recombinant shsp plasmids into different S. thermophilus and Lactococcus lactis strains. Using a recombinant plasmid carrying an erythromycin resistance (Emr) gene in addition to shsp, we demonstrated that both markers are equally efficient in selecting for plasmid-bearing cells. The average transformation rates in S. thermophilus (when we were selecting for heat resistance) were determined to be 2.4 × 104 and 1.0 × 104 CFU/0.5 μg of DNA, with standard deviations of 0.54 × 104 and 0.32 × 104, for shsp and Emr selection, respectively. When we selected for pH resistance, the average transformation rates were determined to be 2.25 × 104 and 3.8 × 103 CFU/0.5 μg of DNA, with standard deviations of 0.63 × 104 and 3.48 × 103, for shsp and Emr selection, respectively. The applicability of shsp as a selection marker was further demonstrated by constructing S. thermophilus plasmid pHRM1 carrying the shsp gene as a selection marker and the restriction-modification genes of another S. thermophilus plasmid as a functional trait.  相似文献   

20.
The purpose of this study was to identify biotinylated single-stranded (ss) DNA aptamers with binding specificity to Listeria and use these for capture and subsequent qPCR detection of the organism. For aptamer selection, SELEX (systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment) was applied to a biotin-labeled ssDNA combinatorial library. After multiple rounds of selection and counter-selection, aptamers separated, sequenced, and characterized by flow cytometry showed binding affinities to L. monocytogenes of 18–23%. Although selected for using L. monocytogenes, these aptamers showed similar binding affinity for other members of the Listeria genus and low binding affinity for non-Listeria species. One aptamer, Lbi-17, was chosen for development of a prototype capture and detection assay. When Lbi-17 was conjugated to magnetic beads and used in a combined aptamer magnetic capture (AMC)-qPCR assay, the pathogen could be detected at concentrations <60 CFU/500 μl buffer in the presence of a heterogeneous cocktail of non-Listeria bacterial cells, with a capture efficiency of 26–77%. Parallel experiments using immunomagnetic separation (IMS)-qPCR produced the same detection limit but lower capture efficiency (16–21%). Increasing assay volume to 10 and 50 ml resulted in reduced capture efficiency and higher limits of detection, at 2.7 and 4.8 log10 CFU L. monocytogenes per sample, respectively, for the AMC-qPCR assay. Biotinylated ssDNA aptamers are promising ligands for food-borne pathogen concentration prior to detection using molecular methods.  相似文献   

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