Affiliation:
1. Microbiology Division, Food Laboratory, U. S. Army Natick Laboratories, Natick, Massachusetts 01760
Abstract
A total of 36 microorganisms, comprising 19 species of 11 genera, were screened for radiation resistance with
60
Co gamma rays at a radiation temperatore of -80 ± 2 C in phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) under vacuum.
Micrococcus radiodurans
was the most resistant organism. An initial population of 2.8 × 10
5
cells per dose of this species survived 2.4 but not 2.7 Mrad. Of the remaining 18 species with initial populations of about 10
6
cells per dose,
Streptococcus faecium
survived 0.9 to 1.5 Mrad, depending on the strain tested.
S. faecalis
QM survived 0.9 but not 1.2 Mrad.
S. faecalis
1539 and
Alcaligenes faecallis
survived 0.6 but not 0.9 Mrad. Three species of
Salmonella
, one strain each of
Escherichia coli, Streptococcus lactis
, and
Aerobacter aerogenes
survived 0.3 but not 0.6 Mrad. The remaining 22 bacteria did not survive 0.3 Mrad, the lowest dose tested. Detailed survival curve determinations for four strains of
S. faecium
, the most resistant of the test bacteria of public health significance, indicated the following order of resistance at -80 C: α21 > θ12 = F
6
> FEC. Each strain produced two exponential survival curves with different slopes, the breaks occurring at 0.3 to 0.5 Mrad. The D values (doses which reduce the microbial population by 90%) of the more resistant cell fractions were two- to three-fold higher than the more sensitive cell fraction. The resistance of strain α21 was determined at different radiation temperature (+5, -30, -80, -140, -196 C). The D value-radiation temperature relationship followed a quadratic equation. Computations of E
a
and Q
10
values (activation energy and temperature coefficient, respectively) showed a very small thermodynamic effect on radiation death. An Arrhenius evaluation of the temperature effect on cell kill indicated that there was no simple physicochemical mechanism which might explain the change in D value as a function of temperature.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Reference32 articles.
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