Golden Max C, Wanless Brandon J, David Jairus R D, Lineback D Scott, Talley Ryan J, Kottapalli Bala, Glass Kathleen A
1 Food Research Institute, 1550 Linden Drive, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 53706.
2 Conagra Brands, Center for Research, Quality and Innovation, Six ConAgra Drive, Mail Stop 6-475, Omaha, Nebraska 68102, USA.
J Food Prot. 2017 Aug;80(8):1252-1258. doi: 10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-17-012.
Clostridium botulinum is a foreseeable biological hazard in prepared refrigerated meals that needs to be addressed in food safety plans. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of product composition and storage temperature on the inhibition of botulinum toxin formation in nine experimental meals (meat, vegetable, or carbohydrate based). Treatments were inoculated with proteolytic C. botulinum, vacuum packaged, cooked at 90°C for 10 min, and assayed for botulinum toxin in samples stored at 25°C for up to 96 h for phase 1, or at 25°C for 12 h and then transferred to 12.5°C for up to 12 and 6 weeks in phases 1 and 2, respectively. For phase 1, none of the treatments (equilibrated pH 5.8) supported toxin production when stored at 25°C for 48 h, but toxin production was observed in all treatments at 72 h. For the remaining experiments with storage at 12.5°C, toxin production was dependent on equilibrated pH, storage time, and growth of indigenous spoilage microorganisms. In phase 1, no gross spoilage and no botulinum toxin was detected for any treatment (pH ≤5.8) stored at 12.5°C for 12 weeks. In phase 2, gross spoilage varied by commodity, with the brussels sprouts meal with pH 6.5 showing the most rapid spoilage within 2 weeks and botulinum toxin detected at 5 and 6 weeks for the control and cultured celery juice treatments, respectively. In contrast, spoilage microbes decreased the pH of a pH 5.9 beef treatment by 1.0 unit, potentially inhibiting C. botulinum through 6 weeks at 12.5°C. None of the other treatments with pH 5.8 or below supported toxin production or spoilage. This study provides validation for preventive controls in refrigerated meals. These include equilibrated product pH and storage temperature and time to inhibit toxin formation by proteolytic C. botulinum, but the impact of indigenous microflora on safety and interpretation of challenge studies is also highlighted.
肉毒梭菌是预制冷藏食品中一种可预见的生物危害,需要在食品安全计划中加以应对。本研究的目的是评估产品成分和储存温度对九种实验餐食(肉类、蔬菜类或碳水化合物类)中肉毒毒素形成抑制作用的影响。将餐食接种蛋白水解性肉毒梭菌,进行真空包装,在90°C下烹饪10分钟,然后对在25°C下储存长达96小时的样品进行肉毒毒素检测(第1阶段),或者在25°C下储存12小时,然后分别在第1阶段和第2阶段转移至12.5°C下储存长达12周和6周。在第1阶段,当在25°C下储存48小时时,没有一种处理(平衡pH值为5.8)支持毒素产生,但在72小时时所有处理中均观察到毒素产生。对于其余在12.5°C下储存的实验,毒素产生取决于平衡pH值、储存时间和原生腐败微生物的生长情况。在第1阶段,在12.5°C下储存12周的任何处理(pH值≤5.8)均未检测到严重腐败和肉毒毒素。在第2阶段,不同商品的严重腐败情况各不相同,pH值为6.5的抱子甘蓝餐食在2周内显示出最快的腐败,对照处理和培养芹菜汁处理分别在第5周和第6周检测到肉毒毒素。相比之下,腐败微生物使pH值为5.9的牛肉处理的pH值降低了1.0个单位,在12.5°C下可能在6周内抑制肉毒梭菌生长。pH值为5.8或更低的其他处理均不支持毒素产生或腐败。本研究为冷藏餐食的预防性控制提供了验证。这些控制措施包括平衡产品pH值、储存温度和时间以抑制蛋白水解性肉毒梭菌的毒素形成,但同时也强调了原生微生物群落对安全性的影响以及挑战研究的解读。