School of Public Health, Queensland, Australia.
CSIRO Agriculture and Food, Coopers Plains, Queensland, Australia.
J Food Prot. 2020 Oct 1;83(10):1812-1821. doi: 10.4315/JFP-20-109.
There is increasing evidence that diversity changes in bacterial communities of beef cattle correlate to the presence of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC). However, studies that found an association between STEC and bacterial diversity have been focused on preslaughter stages in the beef supply chain. This study was designed to test a hypothesis that there are no differences in bacterial diversity between samples with and those without the presence of the top 7 STEC (O26, O45, O103, O111, O121, O145, and O157) throughout processing in an integrated (abattoir A) and a fragmented (abattoir B) Australian beef abattoir. Slaughter and boning room surface samples from each abattoir were analyzed using 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing and tested for the top 7 STEC following the Food Safety and Inspection Service protocol. Potential positives through slaughter were similar between the abattoirs (64 to 81%). However, abattoir B had substantially reduced potential positives in the boning room compared with abattoir A (abattoir A: 23 and 48%; abattoir B: 2 and 7%). Alpha diversity between the sample groups was not significantly different (P > 0.05) regardless of different STEC markers. Nonmetric multidimensional scaling of slaughter samples showed that the bacterial composition in fecal and hide samples shared the least similarity with the communities in carcass and environmental samples. Surface samples from slaughter (carcass and environmental) and boning (carcass, beef trim, and environmental) all appeared randomly plotted on the scale. This indicated that the STEC presence also did not have a significant effect (P > 0.05) on beta diversity. Although presence of STEC appeared to correlate with changes in diversity of fecal and hide bacterial communities in previous studies, it did not appear to have the same effect on other samples throughout processing.
越来越多的证据表明,肉牛细菌群落的多样性变化与产志贺毒素大肠杆菌(STEC)的存在有关。然而,发现 STEC 与细菌多样性之间存在关联的研究一直集中在牛肉供应链的屠宰前阶段。本研究旨在检验一个假设,即在一个综合(屠宰场 A)和一个分散(屠宰场 B)的澳大利亚牛肉屠宰场中,在加工过程中,是否存在携带 top7-STEC(O26、O45、O103、O111、O121、O145 和 O157)的样本与不携带 top7-STEC 的样本之间,在细菌多样性方面没有差异。使用 16S rRNA 扩增子测序对每个屠宰场的屠宰和去骨车间表面样本进行分析,并按照食品安全与检验服务协议检测 top7-STEC。两个屠宰场的潜在阳性样本数量相似(64%至 81%)。然而,与屠宰场 A 相比,屠宰场 B 的去骨车间中潜在阳性样本数量大幅减少(屠宰场 A:23%和 48%;屠宰场 B:2%和 7%)。无论使用不同的 STEC 标记物,样本组之间的 alpha 多样性均无显著差异(P>0.05)。屠宰样本的非度量多维标度分析表明,粪便和皮毛样本中的细菌组成与胴体和环境样本中的群落相似度最低。屠宰(胴体和环境)和去骨(胴体、牛肉修剪物和环境)的表面样本在比例尺上似乎都是随机分布的。这表明 STEC 的存在也没有对 beta 多样性产生显著影响(P>0.05)。尽管在之前的研究中,STEC 的存在似乎与粪便和皮毛细菌群落多样性的变化有关,但它似乎对加工过程中的其他样本没有相同的影响。