| Literature DB >> 33337102 |
Andreja Rajkovic1, Jelena Jovanovic1, Silvia Monteiro2, Marlies Decleer1,3, Mirjana Andjelkovic4, Astrid Foubert3, Natalia Beloglazova3,5, Varvara Tsilla1, Benedikt Sas1, Annemieke Madder6, Sarah De Saeger3, Mieke Uyttendaele1.
Abstract
Bacterial toxins are food safety hazards causing about 10% of all reported foodborne outbreaks in Europe. Pertinent to Gram-positive pathogens, the most relevant toxins are emetic toxin and diarrheal enterotoxins of Bacillus cereus, neurotoxins of Clostridium botulinum, enterotoxin of Clostridium perfringens, and a family of enterotoxins produced by Staphylococcus aureus and some other staphylococci. These toxins are the most important virulence factors of respective foodborne pathogens and a primary cause of the related foodborne diseases. They are proteins or peptides that differ from each other in their size, structure, toxicity, toxicological end points, solubility, and stability, types of food matrix to which they are mostly related to. These differences influence the characteristics of required detection methods. Therefore, detection of these toxins in food samples, or detection of toxin production capacity in the bacterial isolate, remains one of the cornerstones of microbial food analysis and an essential tool in understanding the relevant properties of these toxins. Advanced research has led into new insights of the incidence of toxins, mechanisms of their production, their physicochemical properties, and their toxicological mode of action and dose-response profile. This review focuses on biological, immunological, mass spectrometry, and molecular assays as the most commonly used detection and quantification methods for toxins of B. cereus, C. botulinum, C. perfringens, and S. aureus. Gathered and analyzed information provides a comprehensive blueprint of the existing knowledge on the principles of these assays, their application in food safety, limits of detection and quantification, matrices in which they are applicable, and type of information they provide to the user.Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus; Clostridium; Staphylococcus; bacterial toxins; detection; food safety; intoxication; toxicity; toxico-infection
Year: 2020 PMID: 33337102 DOI: 10.1111/1541-4337.12571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Compr Rev Food Sci Food Saf ISSN: 1541-4337 Impact factor: 12.811