Twelve laboratories evaluated the Gram-Negative Identification (GNI) Card to identify members of the Enterobacteriaceae. Eighty-four isolates, previously isolated from foods, were used in the collaborative study; the isolates represented 12 genera within the Enterobacteriaceae group. Each collaborator streaked each isolate on tryptic soy agar plates for purity. In the method, plates are incubated 18-24 h at 35 degrees C. Isolated colonies are then subcultured to tryptic soy agar slants and incubated 18-24 h at 35 degrees C. An emulsion is made from the growth on the slant in 1.8 mL 0.45% sodium chloride solution. The GNI Card is filled and placed in a reader/incubator. Isolates are identified and an identification is printed. The Vitek System correctly identified 96.7% of Salmonella sp., 97.0% of Escherichia coli, and an average of 93.8% of the other enteric genera. The method using the Vitek System and GNI Card has been approved interim official first action by AOAC as a screening method for the presumptive identification of Salmonella sp., E. coli, and other Enterobacteriaceae isolated from foods.

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