Affiliation:
1. Food Science Australia, 11 Julius Ave., North Ryde, New South Wales 2113, Australia
2. Mars Food Europe C.V., Benjamin Franklinstraat 19, 3261LW Oud-Beijerland, The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The combined high pressure and heat resistances of spores of five proteolytic
Clostridium botulinum
strains and of the nonpathogenic surrogate strain
Clostridium sporogenes
PA3679 were compared with their heat-only resistances on the basis of equivalent accumulated thermal lethality, expressed as equivalent minutes at a reference temperature of 105°C (
F
105
°
C
). Comparisons were made with three model (i.e., diluted) products, namely, 30% (wt/wt) Bolognese sauce, 50% (wt/wt) cream sauce, and rice water agar. Pressure was determined to act synergistically with heat during high-pressure thermal (HPT) processing for
C. botulinum
FRRB 2802 (NCTC 7273) and
C. botulinum
FRRB 2804 (NCTC 3805 and 62A) in the Bolognese and cream sauces and for
C. botulinum
FRRB 2807 (213B) in the Bolognese sauce only. No synergy was observed for
C. botulinum
FRRB 2803 (NCTC 2916) or FRRB 2806 (62A) or
C. sporogenes
FRRB 2790 (NCTC 8594 and PA3679) in any of the model products. No significant protective effect of pressure against spore inactivation was determined for any
Clostridium
strain in any product. Because synergy was not consistently observed among strains of
C. botulinum
or among products, the prediction of inactivation of
C. botulinum
spores by HPT sterilization (HPTS) for the present must assume a complete lack of synergy. Therefore, any HPTS process for low-acid shelf-stable foods must be at least thermally equivalent to an F
0
process of 2.8 min, in line with current good manufacturing practices. The results of this study suggest that the use of
C. sporogenes
PA3679 as a surrogate organism may risk overestimating inactivation of
C. botulinum
by HPT processing.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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