Evaluation of a loop-mediated isothermal amplification method for the detection of in dairy food.
Journal:
Italian journal of food safety
Published Date:
Dec 14, 2017
Abstract
Objective of the present study was to test the performances of a loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP)-based method for the detection of , with particular focus on the dairy products. The specificity of the method was evaluated on 42 different spp. strains from collections, food and environmental samples. 100% (32 of 32) of the strains were correctly recognised, and none of other 10 spp. strains was misidentified. The sensitivity was evaluated on four strains from different sources. The instrument was able to detect 10-400 CFU/mL. The ability to detect low initial numbers of (0.3-0.7 Log CFU/g) was also evaluated, in duplicate, in pasteurised milk (whole and skimmed) and dairy samples (fresh ricotta, crescenza, mascarpone, mozzarella, cottage cheese, cream cheese, taleggio, gorgonzola). The analysis was performed after 18, 24 and 48 h of incubation, and was coupled with the count of in the broth. Microbial loads were insufficient to achieve a positive result after 18 and 24 h in most of the samples; after 48 h, all the products, except taleggio and one gorgonzola sample, were identified as positive; the sensitivity of the method when applied to contaminated dairy foods was about 5 Log CFU/g. The LAMP method tested can be considered a very useful tool, as it is a costeffective and easy-functioning method. The preliminary data obtained should be confirmed with a validation process taking into account different food typologies.
Authors
Keywords
No keywords available for this article.