A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.

Globally, fermented foods (FFs), which may be traditional or industrially-produced, are major sources of nutrition. In the traditional practice, the fermentation process is driven by communities of virtually uncharacterized microflora indigenous to the food substrate. Some of these flora can have vi...

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Main Author: Solomon H Mariam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254390
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spelling doaj-7a8948151e8d4c3ca98b2c4541b36db92021-07-31T04:32:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01167e025439010.1371/journal.pone.0254390A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.Solomon H MariamGlobally, fermented foods (FFs), which may be traditional or industrially-produced, are major sources of nutrition. In the traditional practice, the fermentation process is driven by communities of virtually uncharacterized microflora indigenous to the food substrate. Some of these flora can have virulent or antibiotic resistance properties, posing risk to consumers. Others, such as Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium, may also be found in such foods. Enterococci that harbor antibiotic resistance or virulence factors can cycle among animals, food, humans and the environment, thereby transferring these harmful properties at the gene level to harmless commensals in the food matrix, animals and humans. In this work, several microbial isolates obtained from different FF sources were analyzed for their identity and virulence and/or antibiotic resistance properties. For identification aiming at enterococci, isolates that were Gram-positive and catalase- and oxidase-negative were subjected to multiple tests including for growth in broth containing 6.5% NaCl, growth and hydrolytic activity on medium containing bile-esculin, hemolytic activity on blood agar, and growth at 45°C and survival after incubation at 60°C for 30 min. Furthermore, the isolates were tested for susceptibility/resistance to a select group of antibiotics. Finally, the isolates were molecularly-characterized with respect to species identity and presence of virulence-encoding genes by amplification of target genes. Most sources contained enterococci, in addition to most of them also containing Gram-negative flora. Most of these also harbored virulence factors. Several isolates were also antibiotic-resistant. These results strongly suggest attention should be given to better control presence of such potentially pathogenic species.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254390
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Solomon H Mariam
spellingShingle Solomon H Mariam
A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Solomon H Mariam
author_sort Solomon H Mariam
title A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
title_short A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
title_full A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
title_fullStr A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
title_full_unstemmed A sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
title_sort sampling survey of enterococci within pasteurized, fermented dairy products and their virulence and antibiotic resistance properties.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Globally, fermented foods (FFs), which may be traditional or industrially-produced, are major sources of nutrition. In the traditional practice, the fermentation process is driven by communities of virtually uncharacterized microflora indigenous to the food substrate. Some of these flora can have virulent or antibiotic resistance properties, posing risk to consumers. Others, such as Enterococcus faecalis and Enterococcus faecium, may also be found in such foods. Enterococci that harbor antibiotic resistance or virulence factors can cycle among animals, food, humans and the environment, thereby transferring these harmful properties at the gene level to harmless commensals in the food matrix, animals and humans. In this work, several microbial isolates obtained from different FF sources were analyzed for their identity and virulence and/or antibiotic resistance properties. For identification aiming at enterococci, isolates that were Gram-positive and catalase- and oxidase-negative were subjected to multiple tests including for growth in broth containing 6.5% NaCl, growth and hydrolytic activity on medium containing bile-esculin, hemolytic activity on blood agar, and growth at 45°C and survival after incubation at 60°C for 30 min. Furthermore, the isolates were tested for susceptibility/resistance to a select group of antibiotics. Finally, the isolates were molecularly-characterized with respect to species identity and presence of virulence-encoding genes by amplification of target genes. Most sources contained enterococci, in addition to most of them also containing Gram-negative flora. Most of these also harbored virulence factors. Several isolates were also antibiotic-resistant. These results strongly suggest attention should be given to better control presence of such potentially pathogenic species.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0254390
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