Use of a fluorescent viability stain to assess lethal and sublethal injury in food-borne bacteria exposed to high-intensity pulsed electric fields. (2004).
Date
2004-07Author
Yaqub, S.
Anderson, J.G.
MacGregor, S.J.
Rowan, N.J.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Aims: To apply scanning electron microscopy, image analysis and a fluorescent viability stain to assess lethal and
sublethal in food-borne bacteria exposed to high-intensity pulsed electric fields (PEF).
Methods and Results: A rapid cellular staining method using the fluorescent redox probes 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl
tetrazolium chloride (CTC) and 4¢,6-diamidino-2-phylindole was used for enumerating actively respiring cells of
Listeria mononcytogenes, Bacillus cereus and Escherichia coli. This respiratory staining (RS) approach provided good
agreement with the conventional plate count agar method for enumerating untreated and high-intensity PEFtreated
bacteria suspended in 0.1% (w/v) peptone water. However, test organisms subjected to similar levels of
lethality by heating at 56 C resulted in ca 3-log-unit difference in surviving cell numbers ml)1 when enumerated by
these different viability indicators. PEF-treated bacteria were markedly altered at the cellular level when examined
by scanning electron microscopy.
Conclusions: While PEF-treatment did not produce sublethally injured cells (P < 0.05), substantial subpopulations
of test bacteria rendered incapable of forming colonies by heating may remain metabolically active.
Significance and Impact of the Study: The fluorescent staining method offers interesting perspectives on
assessing established and novel microbial inactivation methods. Use of this approach may also provide a better
understanding of the mechanisms involved in microbial inactivation induced by PEF.
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