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1.
The appearance of Clostridium botulinum type E organisms and of toxin in experimentally inoculated packages of turkey roll was followed to study the time relationship between the presence of vegetative cells and the demonstration of toxin. The presence of vegetative cells was determined by immunofluorescence, and animal tests were used to assay toxin production. Growth initiated from detoxified spores of C. botulinum type E resulted in toxin formation within 24 hr. Presence of fluorescing vegetative cells and of toxin coincided from 1 to 14 days of incubation. Beginning with the next testing date, day 21, differences were observed. Toxin could be detected for a longer time than vegetative cells. Neither toxin nor organisms could be found after 56 days of incubation. The mouse lethal dose tests (MLD per gram of turkey roll) showed fluctuations in the amount of toxin present throughout the period of testing. Maximal amounts of toxin were present during the period when fluorescing organisms were also more numerous. The applications of immunofluorescence in the study and in the diagnosis of botulism is discussed.  相似文献   

2.
The sensitivity of an enrichment culture procedure for detecting Clostridium botulinum type E in whitefish chubs (Leucichthys sp.) was assayed. Data demonstrated that fish inoculated with 10 or more viable C. botulinum spores regularly develop specifically neutralizable enrichment cultures. Mild heat treatment (60 C, 15 min) substantially reduced the sensitivity of enrichment culturing. This effect was particularly noticeable in the culturing of fish which harbored fewer than 10 spores each. Evidence is presented which indicates that sensitivity of enrichment, without heat, approaches the level of one spore per fish. Smoked whitefish chubs, containing from one to several hundred spores each, were examined for toxin content after storage at 5, 10, 15, and 28 C for as long as 32 days. The lowest temperature at which detectable toxin was produced was 15 C. This occurred in 1 of 10 fish incubated for 14 days. C. botulinum was regularly recovered, by enrichment culture, from fish inoculated with small numbers of spores, even though toxin was not detected by direct extraction of incubated fish. Persistence of C. botulinum type E spores was observed to decline with an increase in the temperature and time at which inoculated fish were stored.  相似文献   

3.
By the dilution-centrifugation method, 270 honey samples, both domestic and imported, were examined and Clostridium botulinum was detected in 23 samples (8.5%); type A in 11 samples, type B in two, type C in 10, and type F in one. Of 58 domestic honey samples, six (10%) were positive; three gave type A and the other two type C. Among imported honey samples, Chinese honey gave 12% positives (types A, B, and C) and Argentina honey 20% positives (types A and F). The incidence was higher with samples taken from drums (18%) and from apiaries (23%) than marketing honey (5%). It was estimated that most positive samples contained spores in one per gram or lower concentrations. One sample contained 4 type A spores per gram and another 36-60 type F spores per gram. No distinct biochemical properties were found with the honey isolates.  相似文献   

4.
The incidence of Clostridium botulinum organisms was determined in a variety of plastic-packaged "vulnerable" foods (food requiring little or no heating prior to consumption). A total of 113 foods were examined by use of an enrichment recovery procedure followed by toxin testing in animals. Results of the survey indicate that the incidence of C. botulinum organisms in these vulnerable foods is extremely low. The ability of inoculated food products to support growth and toxigenesis of C. botulinum type E was then tested. The 64 packaged foods were inoculated with type E spores and incubated anaerobically at 30 C for 11 days. A slurry of each food was prepared, smears for fluorescent-antibody testing were made, and animal tests were performed for toxin. If the animal tests were negative, enrichment cultures were prepared from the slurry and incubated at 30 C. On direct examination of the slurries for toxin, only samples of turkey roll and soybean cake supported growth and toxigenesis by C. botulinum type E. However, the enrichment culture method was able to induce growth and toxin production in 60 of the remaining 62 samples.  相似文献   

5.
Investigations to determine the exact susceptibility of mink to Clostridium botulinum type C toxin clearly showed that mink were considerably less resistant to this toxin than has previously been described. Mink weighing approximately 900 g were killed by 360 MLD when toxin was mixed into the feed. By subcutaneous injection, the lethal dose was determined to be in the range of 18 to 36 MLD. When comparing the susceptibility per g of body weight after parenteral application of the toxin, mink proved to be less resistant than mice to this type of toxin. Continued feeding tests in mink with suspected material is pointed out as a preferable method for practical demonstrations of Clostridium botulinum type C toxin in cases where the toxin content in the suspected material is very low (1 MLD per g or less).  相似文献   

6.
The prevalence of Clostridium botulinum types A, B, E, and F was determined in 214 fresh fish and environmental samples collected in Northern France. A newly developed PCR-enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) used in this survey detected more than 80% of samples inoculated with fewer than 10 C. botulinum spores per 25 g and 100% of samples inoculated with more than 30 C. botulinum spores per 25 g. The percent agreement between PCR-ELISA and mouse bioassay was 88.9%, and PCR-ELISA detected more positive samples than the mouse bioassay did. The prevalence of C. botulinum in seawater fish and sediment was 16.6 and 4%, respectively, corresponding to 3.5 to 7 and 1 to 2 C. botulinum most-probable-number counts, respectively, and is in the low range of C. botulinum contamination reported elsewhere. The toxin type identification of the 31 naturally contaminated samples was 71% type B, 22.5% type A, and 9.6% type E. Type F was not detected. The high prevalence of C. botulinum type B in fish samples is relatively unusual compared with the high prevalence of C. botulinum type E reported in many worldwide and northern European surveys. However, fish processing and fish preparation in France have not been identified as a significant hazard for human type B botulism.  相似文献   

7.
Mascarpone cheese implicated in a botulism outbreak was examined for preformed and cultural botulinal toxins using the mouse bioassay. The cheese was also assayed for cultural toxins and for the most probable number (MPN) of toxin-producing organisms/g using an amplified ELISA. No preformed botulinal toxins were discovered in the cheese samples (pH range 5.84-5.86) using the mouse bioassay. However, after cheese subculture in tryptone-peptone-glucose-yeast extract broth, type A botulinal toxin-producing organisms that formed more than 10,000 MLD (mouse lethal dose)/mL in culture were detected. The ELISA results also revealed that type A toxin was present in the culture with a sensitivity of ∼ 10 MLD/mL. The MPN of type A toxin-producing organisms/g in 12 cheese samples examined ranged from < 0.3-9.33. No ELISA cross-reactivity was noted between the type A toxic cultures and other types (B, E, or F). The ELISA sensitivity was ∼5 MLD/mL casein buffer using purified type A neurotoxin. The advantages of the ELISA test are that the toxin type and approximate lethal dose can be determined within one day compared to the mouse bioassay which takes 3–5 days.  相似文献   

8.
A cocktail of washed spores from six psychrotrophic Clostridium strains isolated from blown vacuum-packed meats was inoculated onto lamb chumps. A second washed spore cocktail of four toxigenic reference Cl. botulinum strains, types A, B (two strains) and E, and a Cl. butyricum type E strain, was similarly inoculated onto lamb chumps. All inoculated lamb chumps were individually vacuum-packed and placed into storage at various temperatures typical of good to grossly abusive chilled storage (-1 degree C to 15 degrees C). All packs were observed for gas production (pack-'blowing') over a 12 week storage period. On gas production, or after 12 weeks of storage, packs were examined by mouse bioassay for botulinum toxin production. The packs inoculated with the meat isolate cocktail showed evidence of gas production earlier than packs inoculated with reference strains. No botulinum toxin was recovered from the meat isolate inoculated packs, while botulinal toxin was detected in reference strain inoculated packs down to a nominal storage temperature of 2 degrees C.  相似文献   

9.
The ability of spores of one type A and one type B strain of Clostridium botulinum to grow and produce toxin in tomato juice was investigated. The type A strain grew at pH 4.9, but not at pH 4.8; the type B strain grew at pH 5.1, but not at pH 5.0. Aspergillus gracilis was inoculated along with C. botulinum spores into pH 4.2 tomato juice; in a nonhermetic unit, a pH gradient developed under the mycelial mat, resulting in C. botulinum growth and toxin production. In a hermetic unit, mold growth was reduced, and no pH gradient was detected; however, C. botulinum growth and low levels of toxin production (less than 10 50% lethal doses per ml) still occurred and were associated with the mycelial mat. The results of tests to find filterable or dialyzable growth factors were negative. It was demonstrated that for toxin production C. botulinum and the mold had to occupy the same environment.  相似文献   

10.
Comminuted ham was formulated with different levels of sodium nitrite and nitrate, inoculated with Clostridium botulinum, and pasteurized to an internal temperature of 68.5 C. When added to the meat, nitrite concentrations decreased, and cooking had little effect on them. Nitrite concentrations decreased more rapidly during storage at 27 than at 7 C; however they remained rather constant at formulated levels throughout the experiment at both incubation temperatures. The level of nitrite added to the meat greatly influenced growth and toxin production of C. botulinum. The concentration of nitrite necessary to effect complete inhibition was dependent on the inoculum level. With 90 C. botulinum spores/g of meat, botulinum toxin developed in samples formulated with 150 but not with 200 mug of nitrite per g of meat. At a spore level of 5,000/g, toxin was detected in samples with 400 but not with 500 mug of nitrite per g of the product incubated at 27 C. At lower concentrations of nitrite, growth was retarded at both spore levels. No toxin developed in samples incubated at 7 C. Nitrate showed a statistically significant inhibitory effect at a given nitrite level; however, the effect was insufficient to be of practical value. Analyses for 14 volatile nitrosamines from samples made with varying levels of nitrite and nitrate were negative at a detection level of 0.01 mug of nitrite or nitrate per g of meat.  相似文献   

11.
A monoclonal antibody-based amplified enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method for detecting Clostridium botulinum type A toxin was evaluated for its ability to detect the toxin in the supernatant fluid of pure cultures and after growth from Cl. botulinum spores inoculated into pork slurries. Slurries containing NaCl (1.5-4.5% w/v) and polyphosphate (0.3% w/v) were either unheated or heated, 80 degrees C/5 min + 70 degrees C/2 h, before storage at 15 degrees, 20 degrees or 27 degrees C. The presence of specific toxin was confirmed by mouse bioassay and results compared with those of the amplified ELISA method. A total of 49 strains, 39 Cl. botulinum and 10 Cl. sporogenes (putrefactive anaerobes), and 95 slurry samples were tested. Fourteen of 15 strains of type A Cl. botulinum and 34 of 36 slurry samples containing type A toxin were positive by ELISA. No false positive reactions occurred with Cl. botulinum types B, C, D, E and F, or with the 10 strains of Cl. sporogenes. However, toxin produced by one strain of Cl. botulinum type A (NCTC 2012) was not detected by the amplified ELISA.  相似文献   

12.
The ability of spores of one type A and one type B strain of Clostridium botulinum to grow and produce toxin in tomato juice was investigated. The type A strain grew at pH 4.9, but not at pH 4.8; the type B strain grew at pH 5.1, but not at pH 5.0. Aspergillus gracilis was inoculated along with C. botulinum spores into pH 4.2 tomato juice; in a nonhermetic unit, a pH gradient developed under the mycelial mat, resulting in C. botulinum growth and toxin production. In a hermetic unit, mold growth was reduced, and no pH gradient was detected; however, C. botulinum growth and low levels of toxin production (less than 10 50% lethal doses per ml) still occurred and were associated with the mycelial mat. The results of tests to find filterable or dialyzable growth factors were negative. It was demonstrated that for toxin production C. botulinum and the mold had to occupy the same environment.  相似文献   

13.
Clostridium botulinum type A spores were inoculated at a level of 10(7) spores per ml into sterile beef media with protein concentrations of 1, 2, 3, 4, or 6% and acidified to pH values of 2.01 to 4.75 with hydrochloric acid or 4.19 to 4.60 with citric acid. All experimental manipulations, including blending, acidification, inoculation, incubation (30 degrees C), and analyses, were conducted in an anaerobic chamber-incubator in which atmospheric oxygen levels were maintained below 2 ppm (2 microliters/liter). Under these strict anaerobic conditions (oxidation-reduction values in media ranging from -370 to -391 mV), C. botulinum spores were consistently found to germinate, grow, and produce toxin below pH 4.6. The boundary between toxic and atoxic samples in HC1-acidified beef media was mediated by titratable acidity, pH, and protein concentration. A limiting acidity was not established for the citrate-acidified samples; all blends tested (1, 2, 3, and 4% protein and titratable acidities of 0.091 to 0.453%) became toxic within 5 weeks. At the same pH and protein concentration, citric acid was less effective than HC1 in preventing the germination of C. botulinum spores. Higher levels of cell proliferation in the beef protein, as well as enhanced gas production and putrefactive degradation, indicated that beef was a better substrate than soy for C. botulinum spores under these conditions. Reducing the inoculum to 10(4) delayed but did not prevent spore outgrowth and toxin release at pH levels below 4.6.  相似文献   

14.
Clostridium botulinum type A spores were inoculated at a level of 10(7) spores per ml into sterile beef media with protein concentrations of 1, 2, 3, 4, or 6% and acidified to pH values of 2.01 to 4.75 with hydrochloric acid or 4.19 to 4.60 with citric acid. All experimental manipulations, including blending, acidification, inoculation, incubation (30 degrees C), and analyses, were conducted in an anaerobic chamber-incubator in which atmospheric oxygen levels were maintained below 2 ppm (2 microliters/liter). Under these strict anaerobic conditions (oxidation-reduction values in media ranging from -370 to -391 mV), C. botulinum spores were consistently found to germinate, grow, and produce toxin below pH 4.6. The boundary between toxic and atoxic samples in HC1-acidified beef media was mediated by titratable acidity, pH, and protein concentration. A limiting acidity was not established for the citrate-acidified samples; all blends tested (1, 2, 3, and 4% protein and titratable acidities of 0.091 to 0.453%) became toxic within 5 weeks. At the same pH and protein concentration, citric acid was less effective than HC1 in preventing the germination of C. botulinum spores. Higher levels of cell proliferation in the beef protein, as well as enhanced gas production and putrefactive degradation, indicated that beef was a better substrate than soy for C. botulinum spores under these conditions. Reducing the inoculum to 10(4) delayed but did not prevent spore outgrowth and toxin release at pH levels below 4.6.  相似文献   

15.
Radiation Injury of Clostridium botulinum Spores in Cured Meat   总被引:4,自引:4,他引:0       下载免费PDF全文
Cans of chopped ham, inoculated with spores of Clostridium botulinum strains 33A and 41B at levels of 2,500 and 250 per gram, were subjected to an enzyme-inactivating heat treatment and irradiation with 0.5, 1.5, 2.5, or 3.5 Mrad of Co(60). A portion of the pack was not irradiated, and received a commercial thermal process (F(0) = 0.2). Viable spores were enumerated after treatment and after 6 months of incubation at 30 to 37.7 C. Toxic spoilage occurred at 0 and 0.5, but not at 1.5, 2.5, or 3.5 Mrad. More spoilage and toxin formation occurred in the product irradiated at 0.5 Mrad than in identical product receiving no radiation treatment. Confirmed botulinal spores were isolated from all of the radiation variables of 2,500 per gram-inoculated product and from all but the 3.5 Mrad low-inoculum cans. However, neither growth nor toxin was observed in unspoiled product. The "injury" phenomenon previously described in thermally processed cured meats (survival of botulinal spores without capacity for multiplication or toxigenesis) apparently occurs also in irradiated cured meats.  相似文献   

16.
A monoclonal antibody-based amplified enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) method for detecting Clostridium botulinum type A toxin was evaluated for its ability to detect the toxin in the supernatant fluid of pure cultures and after growth from Cl. botulinum spores inoculated into pork slurries. Slurries containing NaCl (1.5–4.5% w/v) and polyphosphate (0.3% w/v) were either unheated or heated, 80°C/5 min + 70°C/2 h, before storage at 15°, 20° or 27°C. The presence of specific toxin was confirmed by mouse bioassay and results compared with those of the amplified ELISA method. A total of 49 strains, 39 Cl. botulinum and 10 Cl. sporogenes (putrefactive anaerobes), aiid 95 slurry samples were tested. Fourteen of 15 strains of type A Cl. botulinum and 34 of 36 slurry samples containing type A toxin were positive by ELISA. No false positive reactions occurred with Cl. botulinum types B, C, D, E and F, or with the 10 strains of Cl. sporogenes. However, toxin produced by one strain of Cl. botulinum type A (NCTC 2012) was not detected by the amplified ELISA.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Clostridium botulinum type E studies reported in this paper include the incidence of the organism in selected Chesapeake Bay areas, growth and toxin production in crabmeat homogenates, and the effect of pasteurization upon varying levels of spores in crabmeat. Type E spores were detected in 21 of 24 bottom mud samples taken at locations from which blue crabs were being harvested. Sterilized crabmeat homogenates inoculated with as little as five spores per 10 g became toxic after 8 days at 50 F, 2 days at 75 F, and 1 day at 85 F. Growth at 50 F and above was accompanied by gas production and a slightly sour odor. Growth and toxin production at 40 F required 55 days or longer and inocula of 10(3) spores or higher per 10 g of homogenate. At 40 F gas production was usually not apparent and no off odors could be detected. A recommended minimum pasteurization of 1 min at 185 F internal meat temperature reduced type E spore levels in inoculated packs of crabmeat from 10(8) spores per 100 g to 6 or less spores per 100 g, and the pasteurized meat remained nontoxic during 6 months of storage at 40 F.  相似文献   

19.
Some of the physiological and biochemical characteristics of a type F strain recently isolated from the United States were studied and compared with those of the prototype Langeland type F strain. The recent isolates were nonproteolytic, fermented sucrose and ribose, produced spores of low thermal resistance, produced a protoxin activated by trypsin, and grew and produced toxin at 38 F (3.3 C) from a spore inoculum. The prototype Langeland strain was proteolytic, did not ferment sucrose or ribose, and produced spores of relatively high thermal resistance, and the toxin of 3-day-old cultures was not activated by trypsin. Approximately two to three times the minimal lethal dose (MLD) of type F toxin from either Langeland or nonproteolytic strains was cross-neutralized by 1,000 anti-MLD of type E antitoxin. Antitoxin serums prepared by immunizing rabbits with the toxoid of the nonproteolytic type F isolate neutralized the toxin of the Langeland strain, but did not show cross-neutralization with the toxins of other types of Clostridium botulinum.  相似文献   

20.
Vegetative cells and spores of 10 strains of Clostridium botulinum representing types A, B, and E were grown in Trypticase-peptone-sucrose-yeast extract (TPSY) medium. Five type E strains were also grown in Multipeptone-sucrose-Nutramino acids (MSN) medium. Lyophilized samples were subjected to pyrolysis-gas-liquid chromatography (PGLC) analysis, and the resulting pyrograms were examined for variations in elution patterns between spores and vegetative cells of types A, B, and E grown in the TPSY medium and spores and vegetative cells of type E grown in the TPSY medium and spores and vegetative cells of type E grown in TPSY and MSN media. Growth and toxin production of all 10 strains of C. botulinum were investigated by using a modified dialysis sac culture technique. The dialysate supernatant fluid (DSF) obtained after centrifugation of the 5-day-old cultures from the dialysate was also subjected to PGLC analysis. Control samples consisting of (i) noninoculated DSF, (ii) noninoculated DSF plus partially purified toxin, and (iii) 1.0 mg of partially purified toxin were also analyzed by PGLC. Differences between pyrograms of cultures were suitable for positive identification at the type level but not at the strain level. Pyrograms permitting differentiation were also obtained between spores and vegetative cells as well as between the same cultures grown in different media. The dialysis sac technique was useful in detecting growth but not toxin production of C. botulinum.  相似文献   

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