Affiliation:
1. Department of Applied Microbiology, Lund Institute of Technology, Lund University, SE-221 00 Lund
2. AnalyCen Nordic AB, SE-531 19 Lidköping, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A PCR procedure has been developed for routine analysis of viable
Salmonella
spp. in feed samples. The objective was to develop a simple PCR-compatible enrichment procedure to enable DNA amplification without any sample pretreatment such as DNA extraction or cell lysis. PCR inhibition by 14 different feed samples and natural background flora was circumvented by the use of the DNA polymerase
Tth
. This DNA polymerase was found to exhibit a high level of resistance to PCR inhibitors present in these feed samples compared to DyNAzyme II, FastStart
Taq
, Platinum
Taq
,
Pwo
, r
Tth
,
Taq
, and
Tfl
. The specificity of the
Tth
assay was confirmed by testing 101
Salmonella
and 43 non-
Salmonella
strains isolated from feed and food samples. A sample preparation method based on culture enrichment in buffered peptone water and DNA amplification with
Tth
DNA polymerase was developed. The probability of detecting small numbers of salmonellae in feed, in the presence of natural background flora, was accurately determined and found to follow a logistic regression model. From this model, the probability of detecting 1 CFU per 25 g of feed in artificially contaminated soy samples was calculated and found to be 0.81. The PCR protocol was evaluated on 155 naturally contaminated feed samples and compared to an established culture-based method, NMKL-71. Eight percent of the samples were positive by PCR, compared with 3% with the conventional method. The reasons for the differences in sensitivity are discussed. Use of this method in the routine analysis of animal feed samples would improve safety in the food chain.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
75 articles.
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