Affiliation:
1. Center for Food Safety and Department of Food Science and Technology, University of Georgia, Griffin, Georgia 30223-1797
2. Department of Environmental Health Science, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602-2102
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Free-living nematodes are known to ingest food-borne pathogens and may serve as vectors to contaminate preharvest fruits and vegetables.
Caenorhabditis elegans
was selected as a model to study the effectiveness of sanitizers in killing
Salmonella enterica
serotype Poona ingested by free-living nematodes. Aqueous suspensions of adult worms that had fed on
S. enterica
serotype Poona were treated with produce sanitizers. Treatment with 20 μg of free chlorine/ml significantly (α = 0.05) reduced the population of
S. enterica
serotype Poona compared to results for treating worms with water (control). However, there was no significant difference in the number of
S. enterica
serotype Poona cells surviving treatments with 20 to 500 μg of chlorine/ml, suggesting that reductions caused by treatment with 20 μg of chlorine/ml resulted from inactivation of
S. enterica
serotype Poona on the surface of
C. elegans
but not cells protected by the worm cuticle after ingestion. Treatment with Sanova (850 or 1,200 μg/ml), an acidified sodium chlorite sanitizer, caused reductions of 5.74 and 6.34 log
10
CFU/worm, respectively, compared to reductions from treating worms with water. Treatment with 20 or 40 μg of Tsunami 200/ml, a peroxyacetic acid-based sanitizer, resulted in reductions of 4.83 and 5.34 log
10
CFU/worm, respectively, compared to numbers detected on or in worms treated with water. Among the organic acids evaluated at a concentration of 2%, acetic acid was the least effective in killing
S. enterica
serotype Poona and lactic acid was the most effective. Treatment with up to 500 μg of chlorine/ml, 1% hydrogen peroxide, 2,550 μg of Sanova/ml, 40 μg of Tsunami 200/ml, or 2% acetic, citric, or lactic acid had no effect on the viability or reproductive behavior of
C. elegans
. Treatments were also applied to cantaloupe rind and lettuce inoculated with
S. enterica
serotype Poona or
C. elegan
s that had ingested
S. enterica
serotype Poona. Protection of ingested
S. enterica
serotype Poona against sanitizers applied to cantaloupe was not evident; however, ingestion afforded protection of the pathogen on lettuce. These results indicate that
S. enterica
serotype Poona ingested by
C. elegans
may be protected against treatment with chlorine and other sanitizers, although the basis for this protection remains unclear.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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