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Transfer of Bacillus cereus spores from packaging paper into food
- Source :
- Ekman, J, Tsitko, I, Weber, A, Nielsen-Leroux, C, Lereclus, D & Salkinoja-Salonen, M 2009, ' Transfer of Bacillus cereus spores from packaging paper into food ', Journal of Food Protection, vol. 72, no. 11, pp. 2236-2242 . < http://jfoodprotection.org/doi/pdf/10.4315/0362-028X-72.11.2236?code=FOPR-site >
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- Food packaging papers are not sterile, as the manufacturing is an open process, and the raw materials contain bacteria. We modeled the potential transfer of the Bacillus cereus spores from packaging paper to food by using a green fluorescent protein-expressing construct of Bacillus thuringiensis Bt 407Cry(-) [pHT315Omega(papha3-gfp)], abbreviated BT-1. Paper (260 g m(-2)) containing BT-1 was manufactured with equipment that allowed fiber formation similar to that of full-scale manufactured paper. BT-1 adhered to pulp during papermaking and survived similar to an authentic B. cereus. Rice and chocolate were exposed to the BT-1-containing paper for 10 or 30 days at 40 or 20 degrees C at relative air humidity of 10 to 60%. The majority of the spores remained immobilized inside the fiber web; only 0.001 to 0.03% transferred to the foods. This amount is low compared with the process hygiene criteria and densities commonly found in food, and it does not endanger food safety. To measure this, we introduced BT-1 spores into the paper in densities of 100 to 1,000 times higher than the amounts of the B. cereus group bacteria found in commercial paper. Of BT-1 spores, 0.03 to 0.1% transferred from the paper to fresh agar surface within 5 min of contact, which is more than to food during 10 to 30 days of exposure. The findings indicate that transfer from paper to dry food is restricted to those microbes that are exposed on the paper surface and readily detectable with a contact agar method.
- Subjects :
- Paper
Time Factors
Bacillus cereus
Bacillus thuringiensis
Colony Count, Microbial
Food Contamination
engineering.material
Microbiology
Endospore
03 medical and health sciences
Food microbiology
Humans
Food science
030304 developmental biology
2. Zero hunger
Spores, Bacterial
0303 health sciences
biology
030306 microbiology
business.industry
Pulp (paper)
fungi
Food Packaging
Temperature
Humidity
biology.organism_classification
Food safety
Spore
Food packaging
Cereus
Consumer Product Safety
engineering
Food Microbiology
business
Food Science
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 0362028X
- Volume :
- 72
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of food protection
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....562922735c0312af0b6790c53f3e28b8
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.4315/0362-028X-72.11.2236?code=FOPR-site