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Psychrotrophic clostridia mediated gas and botulinal toxin production in vacuum‐packed chilled meat
Author(s) -
Moorhead S. M.,
Bell R. G.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
letters in applied microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.698
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1472-765X
pISSN - 0266-8254
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2672.1999.00490.x
Subject(s) - clostridia , food science , library science , biology , computer science , bacteria , genetics
A cocktail of washed spores from six psychrotrophic Clostridium strains isolated from blown vacuum‐packed meats was inoculated onto lamb chumps. A second washed spore cocktail of four toxigenic reference Cl. botulinum strains, types A, B (two strains) and E, and a Cl. butyricum type E strain, was similarly inoculated onto lamb chumps. All inoculated lamb chumps were individually vacuum‐packed and placed into storage at various temperatures typical of good to grossly abusive chilled storage (−l °C to 15 °C). All packs were observed for gas production (pack‐‘blowing’) over a 12 week storage period. On gas production, or after 12 weeks of storage, packs were examined by mouse bioassay for botulinum toxin production. The packs inoculated with the meat isolate cocktail showed evidence of gas production earlier than packs inoculated with reference strains. No botulinum toxin was recovered from the meat isolate inoculated packs, while botulinal toxin was detected in reference strain inoculated packs down to a nominal storage temperature of 2 °C.