Department of Biology, Manchester Metropolitan University, Manchester, UK.
Int J Food Microbiol. 2010 Jul 31;141 Suppl 1:S125-33. doi: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2010.01.012. Epub 2010 Jan 28.
A range of food soils and components (complex [meat extract, fish extract, and cottage cheese extract]; oils [cholesterol, fish oil, and mixed fatty acids]; proteins [bovine serum albumin (BSA), fish peptones, and casein]; and carbohydrates [glycogen, starch, and lactose]) were deposited onto 304 2B finish stainless steel surfaces at different concentrations (10-0.001%). Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and epifluorescence microscopy were used to visualise the cell and food soil distribution across the surface. Epifluorescence microscopy was also used to quantify the percentage of a field covered by cells or soil. At 10% concentration, most soils, with the exception of BSA and fish peptone were easily visualised using SEM, presenting differences in gross soil morphology and distribution. When soil was stained with acridine orange and visualised by epifluorescence microscopy, the limit of detection of the method varied between soils, but some (meat, cottage cheese and glycogen) were detected at the lowest concentrations used (0.001%). The decrease in soil concentration did not always relate to the surface coverage measurement. When 10% food soil was applied to a surface with Escherichia coli and compared, cell attachment differed depending on the nature of the soil. The highest percentage coverage of cells was observed on surfaces with fish extract and related products (fish peptone and fish oil), followed by carbohydrates, meat extract/meat protein, cottage cheese/casein and the least to the oils (cholesterol and mixed fatty acids). Cells could not be clearly observed in the presence of some food soils using SEM. Findings demonstrate that food soils heterogeneously covered stainless steel surfaces in differing patterns. The pattern and amount of cell attachment was related to food soil type rather than to the amount of food soil detected. This work demonstrates that in the study of conditioning film and cell retention on the hygienic properties of surfaces, SEM may not reveal the presence of retained conditioning film, and thus methods such as epifluorescence microscopy should also be used. This is an essential facet to the methodology design of future work carried out in our laboratories on the effectiveness of the removal of cells and conditioning films from surfaces using different cleaning regimes.
一系列食物土壤和成分(复杂[肉提取物、鱼提取物和乳清干酪提取物];油[胆固醇、鱼油和混合脂肪酸];蛋白质[牛血清白蛋白(BSA)、鱼蛋白胨和干酪素];碳水化合物[糖原、淀粉和乳糖])以不同浓度(10-0.001%)沉积在 304 2B 精整不锈钢表面上。扫描电子显微镜(SEM)和落射荧光显微镜用于观察细胞和食物土壤在整个表面的分布。落射荧光显微镜还用于定量视野中被细胞或土壤覆盖的百分比。在 10%的浓度下,除 BSA 和鱼蛋白胨外,大多数土壤都很容易通过 SEM 观察到,其宏观土壤形态和分布存在差异。当土壤用吖啶橙染色并用落射荧光显微镜观察时,方法的检测限因土壤而异,但一些(肉、乳清干酪和糖原)在使用的最低浓度(0.001%)下被检测到。土壤浓度的降低并不总是与表面覆盖率的测量相关。当将 10%的食物土壤应用于表面并与大肠杆菌进行比较时,细胞附着取决于土壤的性质而有所不同。在含有鱼提取物和相关产品(鱼蛋白胨和鱼油)的表面上观察到细胞的最高百分比覆盖率,其次是碳水化合物、肉提取物/肉蛋白、乳清干酪/干酪素,而油(胆固醇和混合脂肪酸)的覆盖率最低。在某些食物土壤存在的情况下,SEM 无法清楚地观察到细胞。研究结果表明,食物土壤以不同的模式不均匀地覆盖不锈钢表面。细胞附着的模式和数量与食物土壤类型有关,而与检测到的食物土壤量无关。这项工作表明,在研究表面卫生性能的条件膜和细胞保留时,SEM 可能无法揭示保留的条件膜的存在,因此还应使用落射荧光显微镜等方法。这是我们实验室在使用不同清洁方案从表面去除细胞和条件膜的有效性方面进行的未来工作的方法设计的重要方面。