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Surface pasteurization of cantaloupes using a
commercial-scale dump tank designed at the ARS Eastern Regional Research
Center. Click the image for more information about it.
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Pathogen Studies Could Result in Safer Produce
By Jim Core
December 12, 2005 Because conventional washing
methods to remove microbial contaminants from fresh fruit and vegetable produce
surfaces have been found to be only marginally effective, Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) scientists in Wyndmoor,
Pa., want to give the produce packing and processing industries better
techniques.
Bassam A.
Annous, a microbiologist at the ARS
Eastern
Regional Research Center,
Food
Safety Intervention Technologies Research Unit, in Wyndmoor, and his
colleagues are developing new technologies to remove or inactivate pathogens on
both fresh and minimally processed produce.
Bacteria can quickly attach to the produce surfaces and form what are called
biofilms that likely improve their ability to colonize and survive. A biofilm
is a mass of microbes attached to a surface and to each other by bacterial
polymers (complex sugars). This polymer coating may protect bacterial cells
from exposure to antimicrobial compounds, such as chlorine, used to sanitize
produce.
The human pathogen Salmonella is often responsible for
produce-related outbreaks of foodborne illness. For example, Salmonella
is difficult to remove from cantaloupe surfaces, because it attaches to
inaccessible sites and forms biofilm on the cantaloupe rind surface. This
allows the pathogen to avoid contact with the sanitizing solution. Surviving
Salmonella cells can then be transferred from the surface of the melon
into the internal tissues during cutting prior to consumption.
Annous and his colleagues recently gained new insight into biofilm formation
by Salmonella on various surfaces. The ability of Salmonella
cells to form biofilm on plastic or stainless steel surfaces was dependent on
the production of fimbriae (hairlike structures) and cellulose that help the
cells attach to and colonize surfaces.
Biofilm formation by Salmonella cells starts by attaching to the rind
of cantaloupe following contamination. Once attached to the rind,
Salmonella cells rapidly develop biofilm by growing and excreting
polymers. This new knowledge helps explain how Salmonella
survives harsh sanitizing environments.
Read
more about the research in the December 2005 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agricultures chief scientific research agency.