spores are extremely resilient to high temperatures. Sublethal temperatures are associated with the 'reactivation' of dormant spores, and are utilized to maximize spore recovery. Spore eradication is of vital importance to the food industry. The current study seeks to elucidate the transient and persisting effects of heating spores at various temperatures. Spores of five strains of different ribotypes (001, 015, 020, 027 and 078) were heated at 50, 60 and 70-80 °C for 60 min in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and enumerated at 0, 15, 30, 45 and 60 min. GInaFiT was used to model the kinetics of spore inactivation. In subsequent experiments, spores were transferred to enriched brain heart infusion (BHI) broths after 10 min of 80 °C heat treatment in PBS; samples were enumerated at 90 min and 24 h. The spores of all strains demonstrated log-linear inactivation with tailing when heated for 60 min at 80 °C [(=7.54±0.04 log vs 4.72±0.09 log colony-forming units (c.f.u.) ml ; <0.001]. At 70 °C, all strains except 078 exhibited substantial decline in recovery over 60 min. Interestingly, 50 °C heat treatment had an inhibitory effect on 078 spore recovery at 0 vs 60 min (7.61±0.06 log c.f.u. ml vs 6.13±0.05 log c.f.u. ml ; <0.001). Heating at 70/80 °C inhibited the initial germination and outgrowth of both newly produced and aged spores in enriched broths. This inhibition appeared to be transient; after 24 h vegetative counts were higher in heat-treated vs non-heat-treated spores (=7.65±0.04 log c.f.u. ml vs 6.79±0.06 log c.f.u. ml ; <0.001). The 078 spores were more resistant to the inhibitory effects of higher temperatures. Heat initially inhibits spore germination, but the subsequent outgrowth of vegetative populations accelerates after the initial inhibitory period.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1099/jmm.0.001048 | DOI Listing |
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