Tag Archives: spp

Research – Chronobacter – Possible reservoir and routes of transmission of Cronobacter (Enterobacter sakazakii) via wheat flour

Science Direct

Contamination of food products is a major route of transmission for opportunistic foodborne pathogen. Cronobacter spp. (formerly Enterobacter sakazakii) are an important group of emerging opportunistic foodborne pathogens that may cause rare but severe systemic infection such as neonatal meningitis, septicemia, and enterocolitis in neonates. Here, we tried to investigate the possible natural reservoir and routes of transmission of this pathogen. Samples of food (N = 141) were screened for the presence of the bacterium, and 34 isolates of Cronobacter spp. were collected in total. Of the initial of 108 samples including infant formulas, dry milk powder, milk and milk related beverages, cereal (products), chocolate and candy, miscellaneous food products, 12% were positive for Cronobacter spp., with the highest percentage (69.3%) coming from cereal products. Further investigation indicated that 100% of 13 wheat flours, 5 of 8 (62.5%) wheat kernel samples, 100% of 5 different brands of dry noodles, and 3 of 7 (42.9%) deep-frozen dumpling samples contained Cronobacter spp. Biochemical analysis (ID32E strips) of the 34 isolates resulted in 11 different biogroups based on the utilization of 8 substrates. In addition, pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) demonstrated extremely high genetic diversity as 24 unique PFGE profiles were revealed among the 25 isolates acquired mainly from wheat flour or related products. We therefore conclude that wheat flour is one likely reservoir and/or transmission route for Cronobacter spp., and special care should be taken while preparing infant foods or formulas in order to avoid cross-contamination from this source.

RASFF Alerts – Bacillus spp – Bean Curd – Listeria monocytogenes – Tuna Mayonaise – E.coli – Horseradish – Clams – Pseudomonas – Mozzarella

RASFF -Bacillus spp. (3.8 x 10*5; 2.4 x 10*5; 1.8 x 10*5; 1.0 x 10*3; 1.2 x 10*5 CFU/g) in bean curd from China in the UK

RASFF-Listeria monocytogenes (< 10 CFU/g) in tuna mayonaise from Belgium in France

RASFF-Salmonella Braenderup (presence /25g) and high count of Escherichia coli (1000; 4000; 6000; 2800; 130 CFU/g) in horseradish tree shoot from Thailand in Norway

RASFF-too high count of Escherichia coli (330 MPN/100g) in live clams (Venus verrucosa) from Greece in Italy

RASFF -high count of Pseudomonas spp. (7.2 x 10E7 CFU/g) in mozzarella cheese from Germany in Italy