Title of article
Effectiveness of a Commercial Lactic Acid Bacteria Intervention Applied to Inhibit Shiga Toxin-Producing Escherichia coli on Refrigerated Vacuum-Aged Beef
Author/Authors
Kirsch, Katie R. Department of Nutrition and Food Science - Texas A&M University - College Station - TX, USA , Tolen, Tamra N. Department of Animal Science - Texas A&M University - College Station - TX, USA , Hudson, Jessica C. Department of Nutrition and Food Science - Texas A&M University - College Station - TX, USA , Castillo, Alejandro Department of Animal Science - Texas A&M University - College Station - TX, USA , Griffin, Davey Department of Animal Science - Texas A&M AgriLife Extension - College Station - TX, USA , Matthew Taylor, T. Department of Animal Science - Texas A&M University - College Station - TX, USA
Pages
6
From page
1
To page
6
Abstract
Because of their antagonistic activity towards pathogenic and spoilage bacteria, some members of the lactic acid bacteria (LAB) have
been evaluated for use as food biopreservatives. The objectives of this study were to assess the antimicrobial utility of a commercial
LAB intervention against O157 and non-O157 Shiga-toxigenic E. coli (STEC) on intact beef strip loins during refrigerated vacuum
aging and determine intervention efficacy as a function of mode of intervention application. Prerigor strip loins were inoculated
with a cocktail (8.9±0.1 log10 CFU/ml) of rifampicin-resistant (100.0 𝜇g/ml; RifR) O157 and non-O157 STEC. Inoculated loins were
chilled to ≤4∘
C and treated with 8.7 ± 0.1 log10 CFU/ml LAB intervention using either a pressurized tank air sprayer (conventional
application) or air-assisted electrostatic sprayer (ESS). Surviving STEC were enumerated on tryptic soy agar supplemented with
100.0 𝜇g/ml rifampicin (TSAR) to determine STEC inhibition as a function of intervention application method (conventional,
ESS) and refrigerated aging period (14, 28 days). Intervention application reduced STEC by 0.4 log10 CFU/cm2 (𝑝 < 0.05), although
application method did not impact STEC reductions (𝑝 > 0.05). Data indicate that the LAB biopreservative may assist beef safety
protection when utilized within a multi-intervention beef harvest, fabrication, and aging process.
Keywords
Effectiveness , Commercial Lactic Acid Bacteria , Inhibit Shiga Toxin-Producing , Escherichia coli , Vacuum-Aged Beef
Journal title
International Journal of Food Science
Serial Year
2017
Record number
2587738
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