Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard

The objectives of this study were: a) to determine E. coli O157:H7 survival on tomatoes and cardboard squares post-drying, stored at 25 ºC in humidified environment for four days, in buffered peptone water (BPW), and 0.1% diluted peptone (DP); b) to determine pathogen transfer rates (0, 1.5, or 24-h...

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Main Authors: Oleksandr Tokarskyy, Mykhaylo Korda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: HACCP Consulting 2019-12-01
Series:Potravinarstvo
Subjects:
Online Access:https://potravinarstvo.com/journal1/index.php/potravinarstvo/article/view/1210
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spelling doaj-71046c30ebdb4a77928c987f229fa5c22020-11-25T03:56:16ZengHACCP ConsultingPotravinarstvo 1337-09602019-12-0113194194910.5219/1210886Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboardOleksandr Tokarskyy0Mykhaylo Korda1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6066-5165Ternopil State Medical University, International Students”™ Faculty, Department of Medical Biochemistry, Maidan Voli 1, 46001, Ternopil, Ukraine, Tel: +380964102536Ternopil State Medical University, Department of Medical Biochemistry, Maidan Voli 1, 46001, Ternopil, Ukraine, Tel: +380352524492The objectives of this study were: a) to determine E. coli O157:H7 survival on tomatoes and cardboard squares post-drying, stored at 25 ºC in humidified environment for four days, in buffered peptone water (BPW), and 0.1% diluted peptone (DP); b) to determine pathogen transfer rates (0, 1.5, or 24-hours drying post-inoculation), from inoculated tomato surfaces to uninoculated cardboard squares and conversely; and c) to evaluate SystemSure Plus ATP luminometer for recognizing contamination on visibly soiled (BPW) or visible clean (DP) cardboard. In tomato inoculation studies, E. coli O157:H7 survived better on the fruit when the inoculum was prepared using DP as compared to BPW. The 1.5-hours post drying counts of 5.34 and 5.76 log10 CFU.mL-1 in the rinsate substantially declined to 1.45 and 1.17 log10 CFU.mL-1 on day four, for DP and BPW, respectively. In cardboard inoculation studies, E. coli O157:H7 persisted for four days, with 1.5-hours post-drying counts and day four counts of 4.53 (DP) and 2.55 log10 CFU.mL-1 (BPW), contrary to 3.81 (DP) and 1.92 log10 CFU.mL-1 (BPW). Under the first impression, the slower die-off of E. coli O157:H7 on cardboard questions the possibility of reusing cardboard boxes due to the potential for cross-contamination. In wet transfer (0 hour drying) trials, both tomato-to-cardboard and cardboard-to-tomato yielded 100% positive transfers irrespective of diluent type. Dry transfer (1.5-hours drying interval post inoculation) from tomato-to-cardboard were 100% positive, but no positives were noted when inoculated, dried cardboard was contacted to tomatoes, irrespective of diluent. Results of transfers with BPW as the diluent showed 100% positive transfer from 24-hours dry tomatoes-to-cardboard, as inoculation spots on the tomatoes remained moist due to hygroscopic nature of solutes in BPW. Conversely, only a 40% positive transfer rate was observed under the same conditions with DP as diluent. No positive transfers were recorded from 24-hours dry cardboard-to-tomatoes, irrespective of diluent type. Though E. coli O157:H7 survived better on the surface of cardboard compared to the surface of tomatoes on day four, the dry transfers were more efficient from tomatoes-to-cardboard than conversely, possibly due to smooth and hydrophobic properties of the tomato, and rough and porous surface of the cardboard. ATP luciferase UltrasnapTM swab test showed 9/9 “pass” results for sterile liquid DP and BPW, while 9/9 “fail” results were observed with liquid peptone and BPW contaminated at ca. 9.0 log10 CFU.mL-1E. coli O157:H7. Cardboard squares treated and dried, with sterile DP, showed 8/9 “pass” ATP luciferase results, and 1/9 “warning”, while cardboard squares with contaminated DP showed 9/9 “fail” result. Cardboard squares treated and dried, with sterile BPW, showed 7/9 “pass” ATP luciferase results, and 2/9 “warning”, while cardboard squares with contaminated BPW showed 9/9 “fail” result. Luminometer can simplify detection of microbial load, as well as organic residues, helping to check cardboard boxes for cleanness.https://potravinarstvo.com/journal1/index.php/potravinarstvo/article/view/1210tomatoescardboarde. coli o157:h7survivaltransfercross-contaminationatp luciferase test
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Oleksandr Tokarskyy
Mykhaylo Korda
spellingShingle Oleksandr Tokarskyy
Mykhaylo Korda
Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
Potravinarstvo
tomatoes
cardboard
e. coli o157:h7
survival
transfer
cross-contamination
atp luciferase test
author_facet Oleksandr Tokarskyy
Mykhaylo Korda
author_sort Oleksandr Tokarskyy
title Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
title_short Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
title_full Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
title_fullStr Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
title_full_unstemmed Influence of suspension liquid total solids on E. coli O157:H7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
title_sort influence of suspension liquid total solids on e. coli o157:h7 survival and transfer efficacy between green tomatoes and cardboard
publisher HACCP Consulting
series Potravinarstvo
issn 1337-0960
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The objectives of this study were: a) to determine E. coli O157:H7 survival on tomatoes and cardboard squares post-drying, stored at 25 ºC in humidified environment for four days, in buffered peptone water (BPW), and 0.1% diluted peptone (DP); b) to determine pathogen transfer rates (0, 1.5, or 24-hours drying post-inoculation), from inoculated tomato surfaces to uninoculated cardboard squares and conversely; and c) to evaluate SystemSure Plus ATP luminometer for recognizing contamination on visibly soiled (BPW) or visible clean (DP) cardboard. In tomato inoculation studies, E. coli O157:H7 survived better on the fruit when the inoculum was prepared using DP as compared to BPW. The 1.5-hours post drying counts of 5.34 and 5.76 log10 CFU.mL-1 in the rinsate substantially declined to 1.45 and 1.17 log10 CFU.mL-1 on day four, for DP and BPW, respectively. In cardboard inoculation studies, E. coli O157:H7 persisted for four days, with 1.5-hours post-drying counts and day four counts of 4.53 (DP) and 2.55 log10 CFU.mL-1 (BPW), contrary to 3.81 (DP) and 1.92 log10 CFU.mL-1 (BPW). Under the first impression, the slower die-off of E. coli O157:H7 on cardboard questions the possibility of reusing cardboard boxes due to the potential for cross-contamination. In wet transfer (0 hour drying) trials, both tomato-to-cardboard and cardboard-to-tomato yielded 100% positive transfers irrespective of diluent type. Dry transfer (1.5-hours drying interval post inoculation) from tomato-to-cardboard were 100% positive, but no positives were noted when inoculated, dried cardboard was contacted to tomatoes, irrespective of diluent. Results of transfers with BPW as the diluent showed 100% positive transfer from 24-hours dry tomatoes-to-cardboard, as inoculation spots on the tomatoes remained moist due to hygroscopic nature of solutes in BPW. Conversely, only a 40% positive transfer rate was observed under the same conditions with DP as diluent. No positive transfers were recorded from 24-hours dry cardboard-to-tomatoes, irrespective of diluent type. Though E. coli O157:H7 survived better on the surface of cardboard compared to the surface of tomatoes on day four, the dry transfers were more efficient from tomatoes-to-cardboard than conversely, possibly due to smooth and hydrophobic properties of the tomato, and rough and porous surface of the cardboard. ATP luciferase UltrasnapTM swab test showed 9/9 “pass” results for sterile liquid DP and BPW, while 9/9 “fail” results were observed with liquid peptone and BPW contaminated at ca. 9.0 log10 CFU.mL-1E. coli O157:H7. Cardboard squares treated and dried, with sterile DP, showed 8/9 “pass” ATP luciferase results, and 1/9 “warning”, while cardboard squares with contaminated DP showed 9/9 “fail” result. Cardboard squares treated and dried, with sterile BPW, showed 7/9 “pass” ATP luciferase results, and 2/9 “warning”, while cardboard squares with contaminated BPW showed 9/9 “fail” result. Luminometer can simplify detection of microbial load, as well as organic residues, helping to check cardboard boxes for cleanness.
topic tomatoes
cardboard
e. coli o157:h7
survival
transfer
cross-contamination
atp luciferase test
url https://potravinarstvo.com/journal1/index.php/potravinarstvo/article/view/1210
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