Although the transmission of L. monocytogenes to humans via pasteurized egg products has not been documented, L. monocytogenes and other Listeria species have been isolated from commercially broken raw liquid whole egg (LWE) in both the United States and Ireland. Recent Listeria thermal inactivation studies indicate that conventional minimal egg pasteurization processes would effect only a 2.1- to 2.7-order-of-magnitude inactivation of L. monocytogenes in LWE; thus, the margin of safety provided by conventional pasteurization processes is substantially smaller for L. monocytogenes than for Salmonella species (a 9-order-of-magnitude process). The objective of this study was to evaluate the inhibitory effects of nisin on the survival and growth of L. monocytogenes in refrigerated and pH-adjusted (pH 6.6 versus pH 7.5) ultrapasteurized LWE and in a liquid model system. The addition of nisin (1,000 IU/ml) to pH-adjusted ultrapasteurized LWE reduced L. monocytogenes populations by 1.6 to > 3.3 log CFU/ml and delayed (pH 7.5) or prevented (pH 6.6) the growth of the pathogen for 8 to 12 weeks at 4 and 10 degrees C. Bioactive nisin was detected in LWE at both pH values for 12 weeks at 4 degrees C. In subsequent experiments, Listeria reductions of > 3.0 log CFU/ml were achieved within 24 h in both LWE and broth plus nisin (500 IU/ml) at pH 6.6 but not at pH 7.5, and antilisterial activity was enhanced when nisin was added as a solution rather than in dry form.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4315/0362-028x-66.6.999 | DOI Listing |
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