4.6 Article

Nature versus Nurture: Assessing the Impact of Strain Diversity and Pregrowth Conditions on Salmonella enterica, Escherichia coli, and Listeria Species Growth and Survival on Selected Produce Items

Journal

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 87, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/AEM.01925-20

Keywords

Listeria; E. coli; Salmonella; cantaloupe; tomato; lettuce

Funding

  1. Center for Produce Safety [2016CPS10]
  2. U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Agricultural Marketing Service [15-SCBGP-CA-0046]

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The inclusion of multiple pregrowth conditions in inoculation studies can better capture the growth and survival patterns of Salmonella enterica and Escherichia coli on produce, especially fresh and fresh-cut produce. This improves microbial risk assessments by accounting for uncertainty more accurately.
Inoculation studies are important when assessing microbial survival and growth in food products. These studies typically involve the pregrowth of multiple strains of a target pathogen under a single condition; this emphasizes strain diversity. To gain a better understanding of the impacts of strain diversity (nature) and pregrowth conditions (nurture) on subsequent bacterial growth in foods, we assessed the growth and survival of Salmonella enterica (n=5), Escherichia coli (n=6), and Listeria (n =5) inoculated onto tomatoes, precut lettuce, and cantaloupe rind, respectively. Pregrowth conditions included (i) 37 degrees C to stationary phase (baseline), (ii) low pH, (iii) high salt, (iv) reduced water activity, (v) log phase, (vi) minimal medium, and (vii) 21 degrees C. Inoculated tomatoes were incubated at 21 degrees C; lettuce and cantaloupe were incubated at 7 degrees C. Bacterial counts were assessed over three phases, including initial reduction (phase 1), change in bacterial numbers over the first 24 h of incubation (phase 2), and change over the 7-day incubation (phase 3). E. coli showed overall decline in counts (<1 log) over the 7-day period, except for a <1-log increase after pregrowth in high salt and to mid-log phase. In contrast, S. enterica and Listeria showed regrowth after an initial reduction. Pregrowth conditions had a substantial and significant effect on all three phases of S. enterica and E. coli population dynamics on inoculated produce, whereas strain did not show a significant effect. For Listeria, both pregrowth conditions and strain affected changes in phase 2 but not phases 1 and 3. IMPORTANCE Our findings suggest that inclusion of multiple pregrowth conditions in inoculation studies can best capture the range of growth and survival patterns expected for Salmonella enterica and Escherichia coil present on produce. This is particularly important for fresh and fresh-cut produce, where stress conditions encountered by pathogens prior to contamination can vary widely, making selection of a typical pregrowth condition virtually impossible. Pathogen growth and survival data generated using multiple pregrowth conditions will allow for more robust microbial risk assessments that account more accurately for uncertainty.

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