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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Effect of Incubation Temperature on Isolation of Campylobacter jejuni Genotypes from Foodstuffs Enriched in Preston Broth

TLDR
Genotyping of poultry and lamb isolates revealed profound differences in the types obtained, and the incubation temperature of Preston media selects for certain genotypes of C. jejuni, and to detect the widest range, samples should be incubated at both 37 and 42°C.
Abstract
Preston broth and agar incubated at either 37 or 42°C have been widely used to isolate campylobacters from foodstuffs. The consequences of using either incubation temperature were investigated. Retail packs of raw chicken (n = 24) and raw lamb liver (n = 30) were purchased. Samples were incubated in Preston broth at 37 and 42°C and then streaked onto Preston agar and incubated as before. Two Campylobacter isolates per treatment were characterized. Poultry isolates were genotyped by random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD), pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and flagellin PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism, and lamb isolates were genotyped by RAPD only. In total, 96% of the poultry and 73% of the lamb samples yielded campylobacters. The lamb isolates were all Campylobacter jejuni, as were 96% of the poultry isolates, with the remainder being Campylobacter lari. The incubation temperature had no significant effect on the number of positive samples or on the species isolated. However, genotyping of the C. jejuni isolates revealed profound differences in the types obtained. Overall (from poultry and lamb), the use of a single incubation temperature, 37°C, gave 56% of the total number of RAPD C. jejuni genotypes, and hence, 44% remained undetected. The effect was especially marked in the poultry samples, where incubation at 37°C gave 47% of the PFGE genotypes but 53% were exclusively recovered after incubation at 42°C. Thus, the incubation temperature of Preston media selects for certain genotypes of C. jejuni, and to detect the widest range, samples should be incubated at both 37 and 42°C. Conversely, genotyping results arising from the use of a single incubation temperature should be interpreted with caution.

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Citations
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Microbiological hazard identification and exposure assessment of food prepared and served in rural households of Lungwena, Malawi

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Prevalence of Campylobacter spp. in raw retail poultry on sale in Northern Ireland.

TL;DR: Results indicate that United Kingdom strategies to control Campylobacter in chicken have not had a significant effect on the prevalence of this pathogen in retail products on sale in Northern Ireland, and are consistent with Northern Ireland surveys undertaken since 2000.
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Enrichment culture can bias the isolation of Campylobacter subtypes

TL;DR: The enrichment method used affects both the number and species of Campylobacter isolated from naturally contaminated samples, as well as the number of samples where the same species had been isolated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Health Risks and Consequences of Salmonella and Campylobacter jejuni in Raw Poultry.

TL;DR: The need for a cost-effective solution to these poultry-borne human disease problems is apparent and inadequate thermal processing or cooking allows survival.
Book

Campylobacter Jejuni: Current Status and Future Trends

TL;DR: This work presents a meta-analysis of 125 cases of Campylobacter infection over a 25-year period and shows clear patterns of progression towards antibiotic resistance in response to conventional antibiotics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prevalence of Campylobacter, Arcobacter, Helicobacter, and Sutterella spp. in Human Fecal Samples as Estimated by a Reevaluation of Isolation Methods for Campylobacters

TL;DR: It is concluded that a range of campylobacteria may cause infections in Denmark and evidence is provided for the existence of S. wadsworthensis in human feces from clinical cases of gastrointestinal disorders and in feces from a healthy individual.
Journal ArticleDOI

Campylobacter contamination of raw meat and poultry at retail sale: identification of multiple types and comparison with isolates from human infection.

TL;DR: Almost 30% of samples yielded multiple strains of Campylobacter, a finding that reinforces the epidemiological importance of selecting and testing more than one presumptive isolate per sample.
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