Development of a rapid method to quantify Salmonella Typhimurium using a combination of MPN with qPCR and a shortened time incubation.

TitleDevelopment of a rapid method to quantify Salmonella Typhimurium using a combination of MPN with qPCR and a shortened time incubation.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsKim, SAe, Park, SHong, Lee, SIn, Ricke, SC
JournalFood Microbiol
Volume65
Pagination7-18
Date Published2017 Aug
ISSN1095-9998
KeywordsAnimals, Bacterial Load, Colony Count, Microbial, Food Microbiology, Limit of Detection, Microbiota, Poultry, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Salmonella typhimurium, Sensitivity and Specificity, Time Factors
Abstract

A novel method was developed for the specific quantification of S. Typhimurium using a most-probable-number (MPN) combined with qPCR and a shortened incubation time (MPN-qPCR-SIT). For S. Typhimurium enumeration, dilutions of samples were transferred into three wells on a microtiter plate and the plate was incubated for 4 h. The S. Typhimurium presence in the wells was identified using a qPCR and populations were determined based on an MPN calculation. The R between the MPN-qPCR-SIT and conventional MPN exhibited a high level of correlation (0.9335-0.9752), suggesting that the MPN-qPCR-SIT offers a reliable alternative method for S. Typhimurium quantification. Although plating and qPCR were limited in their ability to detect low levels of S. Typhimurium (e.g. 0.18 log MPN/ml), these levels could be successfully detected with the MPN-qPCR-SIT. Chicken breast samples inoculated with S. Typhimurium were incubated at 0, 4, and 24 h and incubated samples were subjected to microbiome analysis. Levels of Salmonella and Enterobacteriaceae increased significantly with incubation time. The obvious benefits of the MPN-qPCR-SIT are: 1) a further confirmation step is not required, 2) the detection limit is as low as conventional MPN, but 3) is more rapid, requiring approximately 7 h to simultaneously complete quantification.

DOI10.1016/j.fm.2017.01.013
Alternate JournalFood Microbiol.
PubMed ID28400022