Reduction of Escherichia coli, as a surrogate for Salmonella spp., on the surface of grapefruit during various packingline processes.

Food Microbiol

Horticultural Science Department, Indian River Research and Education Center, University of Florida, 2199 South Rock Road, Fort Pierce, FL, 34945, USA.

Published: April 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The US Produce Safety Rule permits using non-compliant water for washing produce if corrective actions are taken, leading to research on using nonpathogenic E. coli as a substitute for Salmonella during citrus washing.
  • In experiments, whole grapefruits inoculated with E. coli or Salmonella were washed using different treatments, showing no significant difference in bacterial reductions between the two pathogens.
  • The results from pilot packinglines demonstrated effective E. coli removal (3.30 to >5.13 log CFU/grapefruit) and confirmed that standard packing processes can effectively control microbial levels, validating E. coli as an appropriate model for Salmonella.

Article Abstract

The US Produce Safety Rule allows for use of water that does not meet its microbial standards if corrective measures are employed. This research was initiated to determine the suitability of nonpathogenic Escherichia coli as a surrogate for Salmonella during citrus washing, and to evaluate the removal of E. coli from grapefruit on two pilot packinglines (CREC and IRREC) as corrective measures. Whole grapefruit were inoculated with either E. coli or Salmonella and dried, and exposed to a variety of treatments on a lab-scale brush wash system. Individual processes were evaluated on the pilot packinglines with E. coli only. In all lab-scale brush wash system treatments, bacterial population reductions between E. coli and Salmonella were not significantly different (P ≤ 0.05). On pilot packinglines, E. coli populations were reduced by 3.59 to >5.11 log CFU/grapefruit at the CREC packingline, and by 3.30 to >5.13 log CFU/grapefruit at the IRREC packingline. Treatment of fruit through complete packingline processing at both locations reduced E. coli populations to levels below the detection limit (<1 log CFU/grapefruit). The studies indicate E. coli is an appropriate surrogate for Salmonella under tested conditions, and that standard citrus packingline processes can be used as a corrective measure.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2018.10.014DOI Listing

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Reduction of Escherichia coli, as a surrogate for Salmonella spp., on the surface of grapefruit during various packingline processes.

Food Microbiol

April 2019

Horticultural Science Department, Indian River Research and Education Center, University of Florida, 2199 South Rock Road, Fort Pierce, FL, 34945, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • The US Produce Safety Rule permits using non-compliant water for washing produce if corrective actions are taken, leading to research on using nonpathogenic E. coli as a substitute for Salmonella during citrus washing.
  • In experiments, whole grapefruits inoculated with E. coli or Salmonella were washed using different treatments, showing no significant difference in bacterial reductions between the two pathogens.
  • The results from pilot packinglines demonstrated effective E. coli removal (3.30 to >5.13 log CFU/grapefruit) and confirmed that standard packing processes can effectively control microbial levels, validating E. coli as an appropriate model for Salmonella.
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