Literature DB >> 16488037

Staphylococcal community of a small unit manufacturing traditional dry fermented sausages.

Stéphanie Corbière Morot-Bizot1, Sabine Leroy, Régine Talon.   

Abstract

The level and the diversity of the staphylococcal community occurring in the environment and meat products of a small unit manufacturing traditional dry fermented sausages were investigated at two seasons: winter and spring. Gram-positive cocci were enumerated and a collection of 412 Staphylococcus isolates was made. Multiplex PCR, pulse-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and sequencing of the sodA gene were used to identify and characterize the isolates. High counts of Staphylococcus were found in final traditional sausages, reaching about 6 log CFU/g in winter and about 8 log CFU/g in spring. In the environment, the counts varied from 2 log to 7 log/100 cm(2), the higher colonisation being observed on the surface of the drying and cold rooms, cutting tables and the butcher's block. The combination of the three methods allowed the identification of seven species of Staphylococcus in spring and five in winter. S. equorum and S. succinus dominated both in environment and in meat products, 49% and 33% of the isolates, respectively. The other identified species were in decreasing order S. saprophyticus (6%), S. xylosus (5%), S. carnosus (5%), S. simulans (1%) and S. warneri (1%). The two species S. xylosus and S. carnosus were sporadically isolated during the spring. PFGE allowed the assignment of S. equorum to eight pulsotypes showing a wide diversity among this species. But the entire environment and the meat products were dominated by one pulsotype. For S. succinus, three pulsotypes were found with one dominant mainly isolated during the spring sampling. This study highlighted the diversity of staphylococci isolated in the environment and the meat products of a small processing unit manufacturing traditional dry fermented sausages. The S. equorum and S. succinus species rarely described in meat products and never in the environment had great capacity to colonise the entire small processing unit and the meat products.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16488037     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2005.12.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Food Microbiol        ISSN: 0168-1605            Impact factor:   5.277


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