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Methods to Detect Stressed Microorganisms 1.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Sublethal treatments injure bacteria, making them undetectable by selective media. However, these injured bacteria can repair damage in a nutrient-rich environment, regaining their ability to grow and be detected.

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Area of Science:

  • Microbiology
  • Food Safety
  • Bacterial Physiology

Background:

  • Sublethal treatments (physical or chemical) create bacterial populations with both injured and uninjured cells.
  • Injured bacteria exhibit increased sensitivity to selective compounds due to cell wall and membrane damage, hindering their multiplication.
  • These injured cells can repair damage in nutrient-rich, non-selective environments, regaining resistance and proliferative capacity.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop methods for enumerating and isolating bacteria that have been injured by sublethal treatments.
  • To address the challenge of injured bacteria being missed by standard selective media used in food safety.
  • To enable the detection of both indicator and pathogenic bacteria in semipreserved foods.

Main Methods:

  • Development of two novel bacterial repair methods: 'liquid-repair' and 'solid-repair'.
  • The 'liquid-repair' method facilitates enumeration via the Most Probable Number (MPN) technique and isolation.
  • The 'solid-repair' method is designed for direct enumeration, applicable to organisms typically assessed by selective plating.

Main Results:

  • The 'liquid-repair' method proved effective for enumerating and isolating pathogenic and indicator bacteria from semipreserved foods.
  • Repaired bacteria regain resistance to selective agents and can be successfully detected and quantified.
  • The 'solid-repair' method offers a principle for direct enumeration of bacteria usually detected by selective plating.

Conclusions:

  • Bacterial injury from sublethal treatments necessitates specific repair strategies for accurate detection in food matrices.
  • The developed 'liquid-repair' and 'solid-repair' methods enhance the recovery and enumeration of stressed bacteria.
  • These methods improve the reliability of microbiological testing in semipreserved foods, crucial for public health and food safety.