Publications by authors named "E Heir"

Listeria monocytogenes is an important human pathogen with a high mortality rate. Consumption of contaminated ready-to-eat food is the main mode of transmission to humans. Disinfectant-tolerant L.

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Cold-smoked salmon are ready-to-eat products that may support the growth of pathogenic during their long shelf-life. Consumption of such contaminated products can cause fatal listeriosis infections. Another challenge and potential risk associated with CS salmon is their high levels of sodium salt.

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Article Synopsis
  • Listeria monocytogenes clonal complex 7 (CC7) is the most prevalent subtype in Norway, dominating clinical listeriosis cases and found in various environments, including the food industry.
  • The study analyzed the prevalence of CC7 across European countries from 2010-2015, revealing that it is particularly dominant in Norway, Sweden, and Finland, unlike most other European nations where lineage II is less common.
  • Phylogenomic analysis identified four clades of CC7 isolates, mostly clustering Norwegian strains that have been present since around 1830, and found that all isolates shared a set of stress response genes, with some divergence in plasmid-encoded resistance genes.
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Whole genome sequencing (WGS) of foodborne pathogens such as Listeria monocytogenes is globally on the rise in the food industry. It provides an improvement for proactive surveillance and source-tracking and allows in-depth genetic characterization of the pathogen. In the present study, the virulence gene profile including 99 virulence genes of 767 L.

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To investigate the diversity, distribution, persistence, and prevalence of stress survival and resistance genes of Listeria monocytogenes clones dominating in food processing environments in Norway, genome sequences from 769 L. monocytogenes isolates from food industry environments, foods, and raw materials (512 of which were sequenced in the present study) were subjected to whole-genome multilocus sequence typing (wgMLST), single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), and comparative genomic analyses. The data set comprised isolates from nine meat and six salmon processing facilities in Norway collected over a period of three decades.

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