Biological approach to modeling of Staphylococcus aureus high-hydrostatic-pressure inactivation kinetics.

Appl Environ Microbiol

Tecnología de los Alimentos, Facultad de Veterinaria de Zaragoza, Universidad de Zaragoza, C/ Miguel Servet 177, 50013 Zaragoza, Spain.

Published: November 2010

Graphs for survival under high hydrostatic pressure (450 MPa; 25°C; citrate-phosphate buffer, pH 7.0) of stationary-growth-phase cells of eight Staphylococcus aureus strains were found to be nonlinear. The strains could be classified into two groups on the basis of the shoulder length. Some of them showed long shoulders of up to 20 min at 450 MPa, while others had shoulders of <3.5 min. All strains showed tails. No significant differences in the inactivation rate were found during the log-linear death phase among the eight strains. The entry into stationary growth phase resulted both in an increase in shoulder length and in a decrease in the inactivation rate. However, whereas shoulder length proved to depend on sigma B factor activity, the inactivation rate did not. Recovery in anaerobiosis decreased the inactivation rate but did not affect the shoulder length. Addition of the minimum noninhibitory concentration of sodium chloride to the recovery medium resulted in a decrease in shoulder length and in an increase in the inactivation rate for stationary-growth-phase cells. In the tail region, up to 90% of the population remained sensitive to sodium chloride.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2976245PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00900-10DOI Listing

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