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1.
The contamination of enterotoxigenic Clostridium perfringens spores on food contact surfaces posses a serious concern to food industry due to their high resistance to various preservation methods typically applied to control foodborne pathogens. In this study, we aimed to develop an strategy to inactivate C. perfringens spores on stainless steel (SS) surfaces by inducing spore germination and killing of germinated spores with commonly used disinfectants. The mixture of l-Asparagine and KCl (AK) induced maximum spore germination for all tested C. perfringens food poisoning (FP) and non-foodborne (NFB) isolates. Incubation temperature had a major impact on C. perfringens spore germination, with 40 °C induced higher germination than room temperature (RT) (20 ± 2 °C). In spore suspension, the implementation of AK-induced germination step prior to treatment with disinfectants significantly (p < 0.05) enhanced the inactivation of spores of FP strain SM101. However, under similar conditions, no significant spore inactivation was observed with NFB strain NB16. Interestingly, while the spores of FP isolates were able to germinate with AK upon their adhesion to SS chips, no significant germination was observed with spores of NFB isolates. Consequently, the incorporation of AK-induced germination step prior to decontamination of SS chips with disinfectants significantly (p < 0.05) inactivated the spores of FP isolates. Collectively, our current results showed that triggering spore germination considerably increased sporicidal activity of the commonly used disinfectants against C. perfringens FP spores attached to SS chips. These findings should help in developing an effective strategy to inactivate C. perfringens spores adhered to food contact surfaces.  相似文献   

2.
S. Rajan  A.E. Yousef 《LWT》2006,39(8):844-851
The use of pressure-assisted thermal processing (PATP) to inactivate bacterial spores in shelf-stable low-acid foods, without diminishing product quality, has received widespread industry interest. Egg patties were inoculated with Bacillus stearothermophilus spores (106 spores/g) and the product was packaged in sterile pouches by heat sealing. Test samples were preheated and then PATP-treated at 105 °C at various pressures and pressure-holding times. Thermal inactivation of spores was studied at 121 °C using custom-fabricated aluminum tubes; this treatment served as a control. Application of PATP at 700 MPa and 105 °C inactivated B. stearothermophilus spores, suspended in egg matrix rapidly, (4 log reductions in 5 min) when compared to thermal treatment at 121 °C (1.5 log reduction in 15 min). Spore inactivation by PATP progressed rapidly (3 log reductions at 700 MPa and 105 °C) during pressure-hold for up to 100 s, but greater holding times (up to 5 min) had comparatively limited effect. When PATP was applied to spores in water suspension or egg patties, D values were not significantly different. While thermal inactivation of spores followed first-order kinetics, PATP inactivation exhibited nonlinear inactivation kinetics. Among the nonlinear models tested, the Weibull model best described PATP inactivation of B. stearothermophilus spores in the egg product.  相似文献   

3.
Acidothermophilic bacteria like Alicyclobacillus acidoterrestris and Bacillus coagulans can cause spoilage of heat-processed acidic foods because they form spores with very high heat resistance and can grow at low pH. The objective of this work was to study the germination and inactivation of A. acidoterrestris and B. coagulans spores by high hydrostatic pressure (HP) treatment at temperatures up to 60 °C and both at low and neutral pH. In a first experiment, spores suspended in buffers at pH 4.0, 5.0 and 7.0 were processed for 10 min at different pressures (100-800 MPa) at 40 °C. None of these treatments caused any significant inactivation, except perhaps at 800 MPa in pH 4.0 buffer where close to 1 log inactivation of B. coagulans was observed. Spore germination up to about 2 log was observed for both bacteria but occurred mainly in a low pressure window (100-300 MPa) for A. acidoterrestris and only in a high pressure window (600-800 MPa) for B. coagulans. In addition, low pH suppressed germination in A. acidoterrestris, but stimulated it in B. coagulans. In a second series of experiments, spores were treated in tomato sauce of pH 4.2 and 5.0 at 100 - 800 MPa at 25, 40 and 60 °C for 10 min. At 40 °C, results for B. coagulans were similar as in buffer. For A. acidoterrestris, germination levels in tomato sauce were generally higher than in buffer, and showed little difference at low and high pressure. Remarkably, the pH dependence of A. acidoterrestris spore germination was reversed in tomato sauce, with more germination at the lowest pH. Furthermore, HP treatments in the pH 4.2 sauce caused between 1 and 1.5 log inactivation of A. acidoterrestris. Germination of spores in the high pressure window was strongly temperature dependent, whereas germination of A. acidoterrestris in the low pressure window showed little temperature dependence. When HP treatment was conducted at 60 °C, most of the germinated spores were also inactivated. For the pH 4.2 tomato sauce, this resulted in up to 3.5 and 2.0 log inactivation for A. acidoterrestris and B. coagulans respectively. We conclude that HP treatment can induce germination and inactivation of spores from thermoacidophilic bacteria in acidic foods, and may thus be useful to reduce spoilage of such foods caused by these bacteria.  相似文献   

4.
The high-pressure sterilization establishment requires data on isobaric and isothermal destruction kinetics of baro-resistant pathogenic and spoilage bacterial spores. In this study, Clostridium sporogenes 11437 spores (107 CFU/ml) inoculated in milk were subjected to different pressure, temperature and time (P, T, t) combination treatments (700–900 MPa; 80–100 °C; 0–32 min). An insulated chamber was used to enclose the test samples during the treatment for maintaining isobaric and quasi-isothermal processing conditions. Decimal reduction times (D values) and pressure and temperature sensitivity parameters, ZT (pressure constant) and ZP (temperature constant) were evaluated using a 3 × 3 full factorial experimental design. HP treatments generally demonstrated a minor pressure pulse effect (PE) (no holding time) and the pressure hold time effect was well described by the first order model (R2 > 0.90). Higher pressures and higher temperatures resulted in a higher destruction rate and a higher microbial count reduction. At 900 MPa, the temperature corrected D values were 9.1, 3.8, 0.73 min at 80, 90, 100 °C, respectively. The thermal treatment at 0.1 MPa resulted in D values 833, 65.8, 26.3, 6.0 min at 80, 90, 95, 100 °C respectively. By comparison, HP processing resulted in a strong enhancement of spore destruction at all temperatures. Temperature corrected ZT values were 16.5, 16.9, 18.2 °C at 700, 800, 900 MPa, respectively, which were higher than the thermal z value 9.6 °C. Hence, the spores had lower temperature sensitivity at elevated pressures. Similarly, corrected ZP values were 714, 588, 1250 MPa at 80, 90, 100 °C, respectively, which illustrated lower pressure sensitivity at higher temperatures. By general comparison, it was concluded that within the range operating conditions employed, the spores were relatively more sensitive to temperature than to pressure.  相似文献   

5.
Spores of the psychrotrophic Bacillus cereus KBAB4 strain were produced at 10 °C and 30 °C in fermentors. Spores produced at 30 °C were more resistant to wet heat at 85 °C, 1 % glutaraldehyde, 5 % hydrogen peroxide, 1 M NaOH and pulsed light at fluences between 0.5 and 1.75 J cm−2 and to a lesser extent to monochromatic UV-C at 254 nm. No difference in resistance to 0.25 mM formaldehyde, 1 M nitrous acid and 0.025 g l−1 calcium hypochlorite was observed. Spores produced at 10 °C germinated more efficiently with 10 mM and 100 mM l-alanine than spores produced at 30 °C, while no difference in germination was observed with inosine. Dipicolinic acid (DPA) content in the spore was significantly higher for spores prepared at 30 °C. Composition of certain fatty acids varied significantly between spores produced at 10 °C and 30 °C.  相似文献   

6.
The spores of Clostridium perfringens can survive and grow in cooked/pasteurized meat, especially during the cooling of large portions. In this study, 600 MPa high pressure thermal processing (HPTP) at 75 °C for the inactivation of C. perfringens spores was compared with 75 °C thermal processing alone. The HPTP enhanced the inactivation of C. perfringens spores in beef slurry, resulting in 2.2 log reductions for HPTP vs. no reductions for thermal processing after 20 min. Then, the HPTP resistance of two C. perfringens spore strains in beef slurry at 600 MPa was compared and modeled, and the effect of temperature investigated. The NZRM 898 and NZRM 2621 exhibited similar resistance, and Weibull modeled well the log spore survivor curves. The spore inactivation increased when HPTP temperature was raised from 38 to 75 °C. The results confirm the advantage of high pressure technology to increase the thermal inactivation of C. perfringens spores in beef slurry.Industrial relevanceC. perfringens spores may cause food/meat poisoning as a result of improperly handled and prepared foods in industrial kitchens. Thermal processes at 100 °C or higher are generally carried out to ensure the elimination of these pathogenic spores. High pressure processing (HPP) is a food pasteurization technique which would help to maintain the sensorial and nutritional properties of food. Preservation of foods with HPP in conjunction with mild heat (HPTP) would enhance the spore inactivation compared to thermal processing alone at the same temperature, due to a known germination–inactivation mechanism. This technology, together with the application of Good Manufacturing Practices, including rapid cooling, is a good alternative to the traditional methods for producing safe processed meat and poultry products with enhanced sensory and nutritional quality.  相似文献   

7.
In this study, we investigated the survival and inactivation kinetics of a surrogate strain of Bacillus anthracis (Sterne strain) in whole egg (WE), egg white (EW), sugared egg yolk (YSU), and salted egg yolk (YSA) at low (−20, 0, and 5 °C), moderate (15, 20, 25, 30, 35, and 40 °C), and high storage temperatures (45, 50, 55, and 60 °C). Outgrowth of the spores was measured as lag phase duration (LPD). Replication of vegetative cells was measured in terms of growth rate (GR) and maximum population density (MPD). Spore inactivation was recorded as inactivation rate and percent reduction in viable count. In general, spore viability decreased at low and high temperatures and increased at moderate temperatures. At 0 and 5 °C, a 60–100% reduction in spore viability was seen within 2–3 weeks in WE and YSU, 0–30% in YSA, and 50–100% in EW. At −20 °C, however, no drop in spore titer was observed in YSU and EW but a 20% drop in titer was seen in YSA and 50% in WE within 2–3 weeks. At high temperatures, WE, EW, and YSA produced a 20–50% drop in the spore titer within 1–4 h whereas YSU showed 100% inactivation within 0.75 h. At moderate storage temperatures, as the temperature increased from 15 to 40 °C, LPD decreased from 13.5 to 0.75 h and MPD reached 0.27–2.2 × 109 CFU/ml in YSU and WE, respectively. Markedly lower growth was observed in YSA (LPD = 24–270 h, MPD = 9 × 105 CFU/ml) and spores were inactivated completely within 1–6 h in EW. The survivability and inactivation data of B. anthracis in liquid egg products reported in this investigation will be helpful in developing risk assessment models on food biosecurity.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of nitrite and erythorbate on Clostridium perfringens spore germination and outgrowth in ham during abusive cooling (15 h) was evaluated. Ham was formulated with ground pork, NaNO2 (0, 50, 100, 150 or 200 ppm) and sodium erythorbate (0 or 547 ppm). Ten grams of meat (stored at 5 °C for 3 or 24 h after preparation) were transferred to a vacuum bag and inoculated with a three-strain C. perfringens spore cocktail to obtain an inoculum of ca. 2.5 log spores/g. The bags were vacuum-sealed, and the meat was heat treated (75 °C, 20 min) and cooled within 15 h from 54.4 to 7.2 °C. Residual nitrite was determined before and after heat treatment using ion chromatography with colorimetric detection. Cooling of ham (control) stored for 3 and 24 h, resulted in C. perfringens population increases of 1.46 and 4.20 log CFU/g, respectively. For samples that contained low NaNO2 concentrations and were stored for 3 h, C. perfringens populations of 5.22 and 2.83 log CFU/g were observed with or without sodium erythorbate, respectively. Residual nitrite was stable (p > 0.05) for both storage times. Meat processing ingredients (sodium nitrite and sodium erythorbate) and their concentrations, and storage time subsequent to preparation of meat (oxygen content) affect C. perfringens spore germination and outgrowth during abusive cooling of ham.  相似文献   

9.
High-temperature, short-time pasteurization of milk is ineffective against spore-forming bacteria such as Bacillus anthracis (BA), but is lethal to its vegetative cells. Crossflow microfiltration (MF) using ceramic membranes with a pore size of 1.4 μm has been shown to reject most microorganisms from skim milk; and, in combination with pasteurization, has been shown to extend its shelf life. The objectives of this study were to evaluate MF for its efficiency in removing spores of the attenuated Sterne strain of BA from milk; to evaluate the combined efficiency of MF using a 0.8-μm ceramic membrane, followed by pasteurization (72°C, 18.6 s); and to monitor any residual BA in the permeates when stored at temperatures of 4, 10, and 25°C for up to 28 d. In each trial, 95 L of raw skim milk was inoculated with about 6.5 log10 BA spores/mL of milk. It was then microfiltered in total recycle mode at 50°C using ceramic membranes with pore sizes of either 0.8 μm or 1.4 μm, at crossflow velocity of 6.2 m/s and transmembrane pressure of 127.6 kPa, conditions selected to exploit the selectivity of the membrane. Microfiltration using the 0.8-μm membrane removed 5.91 ± 0.05 log10 BA spores/mL of milk and the 1.4-μm membrane removed 4.50 ± 0.35 log10 BA spores/mL of milk. The 0.8-μm membrane showed efficient removal of the native microflora and both membranes showed near complete transmission of the casein proteins. Spore germination was evident in the permeates obtained at 10, 30, and 120 min of MF time (0.8-μm membrane) but when stored at 4 or 10°C, spore levels were decreased to below detection levels (≤0.3 log10 spores/mL) by d 7 or 3 of storage, respectively. Permeates stored at 25°C showed coagulation and were not evaluated further. Pasteurization of the permeate samples immediately after MF resulted in additional spore germination that was related to the length of MF time. Pasteurized permeates obtained at 10 min of MF and stored at 4 or 10°C showed no growth of BA by d 7 and 3, respectively. Pasteurization of permeates obtained at 30 and 120 min of MF resulted in spore germination of up to 2.42 log10 BA spores/mL. Spore levels decreased over the length of the storage period at 4 or 10°C for the samples obtained at 30 min of MF but not for the samples obtained at 120 min of MF. This study confirms that MF using a 0.8-μm membrane before high-temperature, short-time pasteurization may improve the safety and quality of the fluid milk supply; however, the duration of MF should be limited to prevent spore germination following pasteurization.  相似文献   

10.
The objective of this work was to study the germination and subsequent inactivation of Bacillus cereus spores in milk by mild hydrostatic pressure treatment. In an introductory experiment with strain LMG6910 treated at 40 degrees C for 30 min at 0, 100, 300 and 600 MPa, germination levels were 1.5 to 3 logs higher in milk than in 100 mM potassium phosphate buffer (pH 6.7). The effects of pressure and germination-inducing components present in the milk on spore germination were synergistic. More detailed experiments were conducted in milk at a range of pressures between 100 and 600 MPa at temperatures between 30 and 60 degrees C to identify treatments that allow a 6 log inactivation of B. cereus spores. The mildest treatment resulting in a 6 log germination was 30 min at 200 MPa/40 degrees C. Lower treatment pressures or temperatures resulted in considerably less germination, and higher pressures and temperatures further increased germination, but a small fraction of spores always remained ungerminated. Further, not all germinated spores were inactivated by the pressure treatment, even under the most severe conditions (600 MPa/60 degrees C). Two possible approaches to achieve a 6 log spore inactivation were identified, and validated in three additional B. cereus strains. The first is a single step treatment at 500 MPa/60 degrees C for 30 min, the second is a two-step treatment consisting of pressure treatment for 30 min at 200 MPa/45 degrees C to induce spore germination, followed by mild heat treatment at 60 degrees C for 10 min to kill the germinated spores. Reduction of the pressurization time to 15 min still allows a 5 log inactivation. These results illustrate the potential of high-pressure treatment to inactivate bacterial spores in minimally processed foods.  相似文献   

11.
Supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) was used to inactivate Bacillus cereus spores inside biofilms, which were grown on stainless steel. SC-CO2 treatment was tested using various conditions, such as pressure treatment (10–30 MPa), temperature (35–60 °C), and time (10–120 min). B. cereus vegetative cells in the biofilm were completely inactivated by treatment with SC-CO2 at 10 MPa and at 35 °C for 5 min. However, SC-CO2 alone did not inactivate spores in biofilm even after the treatment time was extended to 120 min. When ethanol was used as a cosolvent with SC-CO2 in the SC-CO2 treatment using only 2–10 ml of ethanol in 100 ml of SC-CO2 vessel for 60–90 min of treatment time at 10 MPa and 60 °C, B. cereus spores in the biofilm were found to be completely inactivated in the colony-forming test. We also assessed the viability of SC-CO2-treated bacterial spores and vegetative cells in the biofilm by staining with SYTO 9 and propidium iodide. The membrane integrity of the vegetative cells was completely lost, while the integrity of the membrane was still maintained in most spores. However, when SC-CO2 along with ethanol was used, both vegetative cells and spores lost their membrane integrity, indicating that the use of ethanol as a cosolvent with SC-CO2 is efficient in inactivating the bacterial spores in the biofilm.  相似文献   

12.
To find the range of pressure required for effective high-pressure inactivation of bacterial spores and to investigate the role of alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP) in spores under pressure treatment, mild heat was combined with pressure (room temperature to 65 degrees C and 100 to 500 MPa) and applied to wild-type and SASP-alpha-/beta- Bacillus subtilis spores. On the one hand, more than 4 log units of wild-type spores were reduced after pressurization at 100 to 500 MPa and 65 degrees C. On the other hand, the number of surviving mutant spores decreased by 2 log units at 100 MPa and by more than 5 log units at 500 MPa. At 500 MPa and 65 degrees C, both wild-type and mutant spore survivor counts were reduced by 5 log units. Interestingly, pressures of 100, 200, and 300 MPa at 65 degrees C inactivated wild-type SASP-alpha+/beta+ spores more than mutant SASP-alpha-/beta- spores, and this was attributed to less pressure-induced germination in SASP-alpha-/beta- spores than in wild-type SASP-alpha+/beta+ spores. However, there was no difference in the pressure resistance between SASP-alpha+/beta+ and SASP-alpha-/beta- spores at 100 MPa and ambient temperature (approximately 22 degrees C) for 30 min. A combination of high pressure and high temperature is very effective for inducing spore germination, and then inactivation of the germinated spore occurs because of the heat treatment. This study showed that alpha/beta-type SASP play a role in spore inactivation by increasing spore germination under 100 to 300 MPa at high temperature.  相似文献   

13.
The physiological response of Bacillus licheniformis spores to high pressure and thermal inactivation in sodium citrate buffer and nutrient broth was investigated using multiparameter flow cytometry. Spores were treated by heat-only at 121 °C, by high pressure at 150 MPa (37 °C), or by a combined high pressure and heat treatment at 600 MPa and 77 °C, and then dual stained with the fluorescent dyes SYTO 16 and propidium iodide (PI). For pressure treated spores, but not heat-only treated spores, four distinct sub-populations were detected by flow cytometry, and for these we suggest a three step model of inactivation involving a germination step following hydrolysis of the spore cortex, an unknown step, and finally an inactivation step with physical compromise of the spore's inner membrane.

Industrial relevance

This preliminary study offers a simple and fast flow cytometric method for the rapid assessment of the physiological state of bacterial spores following high pressure and thermal processing. An improved understanding of the mechanisms of spore inactivation will aid in the food safety assessment of pressure assisted thermal sterilisation in particular, and also assist in the commercialisation of these processes facilitating adoption by industry.  相似文献   

14.
The efficacy of a food grade acidic chemical agent for the reduction of Clostridium sporogenes spores on a stainless steel surface was investigated. The chemical agent was a combination of selected fatty acids and lactate esters. Distilled deionized water and 35% hydrogen peroxide were used as negative and positive controls, respectively. Approximately 3 log cfu reductions in viable spore numbers were detected on the steel surfaces for all treatments at room temperature, except the controls. Reductions in the viable spore numbers significantly increased with increasing exposure times and concentrations of the acidic agent. Five log reduction of viable spore number was achieved after 10 min treatment with the 10% agent solution at 68 °C. No viable spores were observed on the 10% agent treated sample after a 60 min exposure time at 75 °C. This research showed that the acidic sanitizer tested in this study could be used to reduce the number of C. sporogenes spores on stainless steel surfaces.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this research was to study the effect of sucrose laurate ester (SL) on enhancing pressure-assisted thermal processing (PATP) inactivation of Bacillus amyloliquefaciens Fad 82 spores. B. amyloliquefaciens spores (~10? CFU/ml) were suspended in deionized water, solutions of 0.1, 0.5, and 1.0% SL, and mashed carrots without or with 1% SL. Samples were treated at 700 MPa and 105°C for 0 (come-up time), 1, 2, and 5 min and analyzed by pour-plating and most-probable-number techniques. Heat shock (80°C, 10 min) was applied to untreated and treated samples to study the germination rates. Results were also compared against samples treated by high pressure processing (700 MPa, 35°C) and thermal processing (105°C, 0.1 MPa). Among the combinations tested, SL at concentrations of 1.0% showed the best synergistic effect against spores of B. amyloliquefaciens when combined with PATP treatments. In the case of high pressure and thermal processing treatments, SL did not enhance spore inactivation at the conditions tested. These results suggest that SL is a promising antimicrobial compound that can help reduce the severity of PATP treatments.  相似文献   

16.
ABSTRACT:  Effect of organic acids (acetic, citric, and lactic; 100 mM, pH 5) on spore inactivation by pressure-assisted thermal processing (PATP; 700 MPa and 105 °C), high pressure processing (HPP; 700 MPa, 35 °C), and thermal processing (TP; 105 °C, 0.1 MPa) was investigated.  Bacillus amyloliquefaciens  spores were inoculated into sterile organic acid solutions to obtain a final concentration of approximately 1.3 × 108 CFU/mL.  B. amyloliquefaciens  spores were inactivated to undetectable levels with or without organic acids after 3 min PATP holding time. At a shorter PATP treatment time (approximately 2 min), the inactivation was greater when spores were suspended in citric and acetic acids than in lactic acid or deionized water. Presence of organic acids during PATP resulted in 33% to 80% germination in the population of spores that survived the treatment. In contrast to PATP, neither HPP nor TP, for up to 5 min holding time with or without addition of organic acids, was sporicidal. In a separate set of experiments, carrot puree was tested, as a low-acid food matrix, to study spore recovery during extended storage following PATP. Results showed that organic acids were effective in inhibiting spore recovery in treated carrot puree during extended storage (up to 28 d) at 32 °C. In conclusion, addition of some organic acids provided significant lethality enhancement ( P  < 0.05) during PATP treatments and suppressed spore recovery in the treated carrot puree.  相似文献   

17.
Xing-Rong Ju  Ming-Lan Yao  Yi Qian 《LWT》2008,41(10):2104-2112
The effects of high pressure (400-600 MPa) and moderate heat (60-80 °C) treatments at various process times (10-20 min) on the reduction of Bacillus cereus As 1.1846 spores, suspended in milk buffer were investigated. In the present work, response surface methodology (RSM) was employed, and a quadratic equation of high hydrostatic pressure inactivation was built with RSM. By analyzing response surface plots and corresponding contour plots and by solving the quadratic equation, experimental values were shown to be significantly in agreement with predicted values, since the adjusted determination coefficient was 0.9752 and the level of significance was P < 0.0001. Optimum process parameters for a six-log cycle reduction of B. cereus spores were obtained: pressure, 540.0 MPa; temperature, 71 °C; and pressure-holding time, 16.8 min. The adequacy of the model equation in predicting optimum response values was verified effectively using experimental test data that was not used in the development of the model.  相似文献   

18.
Comparison of Clostridium perfringens spore germination and outgrowth in cooked uncured products during cooling for different meat species is presented. Cooked, uncured product was inoculated with C. perfringens spores and vacuum packaged. For the isothermal experiments, all samples were incubated in a water bath stabilized at selected temperatures between 10 and 51 °C and sampled periodically. For dynamic experiments, the samples were cooled from 54.4 to 27 °C and subsequently from 27 to 4 °C for different time periods, designated as x and y hours, respectively. The growth models used were based on a model developed by Baranyi and Roberts (1994. A dynamic approach to predicting bacterial growth in food. Int. J. Food Micro. 23, 277-294), which incorporates a constant, referred to as the physiological state constant, q0. The value of this constant captures the cells’ history before the cooling begins. To estimate specific growth rates, data from isothermal experiments were used, from which a secondary model was developed, based on a form of Ratkowsky’s 4-parameter equation. The estimated growth kinetics associated with pork and chicken were similar, but growth appeared to be slightly greater in beef; for beef, the maximum specific growth rates estimated from the Ratkowsky curve was about 2.7 log10 cfu/h, while for the other two species, chicken and pork, the estimate was about 2.2 log10 cfu/h. Physiological state constants were estimated by minimizing the mean square error of predictions of the log10 of the relative increase versus the corresponding observed quantities for the dynamic experiments: for beef the estimate was 0.007, while those for pork and chicken the estimates were about 0.014 and 0.011, respectively. For a hypothetical 1.5 h cooling from 54 °C to 27° and 5 h to 4 °C, corresponding to USDA-FSIS cooling compliance guidelines, the predicted growth (log10 of the relative increase) for each species was: 1.29 for beef; 1.07 for chicken and 0.95 log10 for pork. However, it was noticed that for pork in particular, the model using the derived q0 had a tendency to over-predict relative growth when the observed amount of relative growth was small, and under-predict the relative growth when the observed amount of relative growth was large. To provide more fail-safe estimate, rather than using the derived value of q0, a value of 0.04 is recommended for pork.  相似文献   

19.
Until recently, ohmic heating was commonly thought to kill microorganisms through a thermal effect. However a growing body of evidence suggests that non-thermal effects may occur. Our aim was to determine the kinetics of inactivation of Geobacillus stearothermophilus spores (ATCC 7953) under ohmic and conventional heating using a specially constructed test chamber with capillary sized cells to eliminate potential sources of error and ensure that identical thermal histories were experienced both by conventionally and ohmically heated samples. Ohmic treatments at frequencies of 60 Hz and 10 kHz were compared with conventional heating at 121, 125 and 130 °C for four different holding times. Both ohmic treatments showed a general trend of accelerated spore inactivation. It is hypothesized that vibration of polar dipicolinic acid molecules (DPA) and spore proteins to electric fields at high temperature conditions may result in the accelerated inactivation.  相似文献   

20.
Spores of Bacillus sporothermodurans are known to be contaminant of dairy products and to be extremely heat-resistant. The induction of endospore germination before a heat treatment could be an efficient method to inactivate these bacteria and ensure milk stability. In this study, the nutrient-induced germination of B. sporothermodurans LTIS27 spores was studied. Testing the effect of 23 nutrient elements to trigger an important germination rate of B. sporothermodurans spores, only d-glucose, l-alanine, and inosine were considered as strong independent germinants. Both inosine and l-alanine play major roles as co-germinants with several other amino acids. A central composite experimental design with three factors (l-alanine, d-glucose, and temperature) using response surface methodology was used to optimize the nutrient-induced germination. The optimal rate of nutrient-induced germination (100%) of B. sporothermodurans spores was obtained after incubation of spore for 60 min at 35 °C in presence of 9 and 60 mM of d-glucose and l-alanine, respectively. The results in this study can help to predict the effect of environmental factors and nutrients on spore germination, which will be beneficial for screening of B. sporothermodurans in milk after induction their germination. Moreover, the chosen method of optimization of the nutrient-induced germination was efficient in finding the optimum values of three factors.  相似文献   

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