Chlorine, chlorine dioxide kill spores on apples.With increased attention focused on the threat of bioterrorism, produce and other ready-to-eat foods may be potential vehicles for intentional contamination with disease-causing microorganisms. While chlorine, chlorine dioxide and other sanitizers are effective in killing B. anthracis and other bioterrorism agents on inert surfaces and in aqueous suspensions, the resistance of B. anthracis spores and spores of other Bacillus bacillus (bəsĭl`əs), any rod-shaped bacterium or, more particularly, a rod-shaped bacterium of the genus Bacillus. Some bacterium in the genus cause disease, for example B. species to sanitizers has been given less attention by researchers. B. cereus cereus: see cactus. cereus Any of various large cacti (genus Cereus and related genera) of the western U.S. and tropical New World, including the saguaro and the organ-pipe cactus (Lemairocereus thurberi, also L. marginatus or C. thurberi). and B. thuringiensis are genetically closely related to B. anthracis. Researchers at the University of Georgia Organization The President of the University of Georgia (as of 2007, Michael F. Adams) is the head administrator and is appointed and overseen by the Georgia Board of Regents. undertook a study using B. cereus and B. thuringiensis spores as surrogates for B. anthracis. The goal was to evaluate the efficacy of chlorine and chlorine dioxide and a peroxyacetic acid-based sanitizer sanitizer a sanitizing product capable of cleaning and disinfecting; usually a formulation containing a disinfectant and a detergent. in killing spores of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis in suspension, on the surface of stainless steel and on apples as a ready-to eat model. Their insight will be useful when developing sanitization sanitization /san·i·ti·za·tion/ (-ti-za´shun) the process of making or the quality of being made sanitary. san·i·ti·za·tion n. strategies associated with the Bacillus species. The scientists used water and 5% horse serum as carriers for spore inoculum inoculum /in·oc·u·lum/ (-ok´u-lum) pl. inoc´ula material used in inoculation. in·oc·u·lum n. pl. applied to the surface of stainless steel. A 5% horse serum was used as a carrier for inoculum applied to apples. Inocula were dried on stainless steel for 5 hours and on apples for up to 24 hours before they were treated with sanitizers. At certain concentrations, the sensitivity of planktonic B. cereus and B. thuringiensis spores to chlorine and chlorine dioxide was similar. A portion of the spores surviving treatment with chlorine and, more markedly, chlorine dioxide, had less tolerance to heat. Treatment with the peroxyacetic acid-based sanitizer had little effect on the viability of spores. Planktonic spores of both species were more sensitive to chlorine and chlorine dioxide than were spores on the surface of stainless steel or apples. Chlorine was more effective than chlorine dioxide in killing spores in suspension and on stainless steel. The lethality of chlorine dioxide was markedly reduced when inoculum on stainless steel was suspended in 5% horse serum as a carrier rather than in water. This indicates that neutralization neutralization, chemical reaction, according to the Arrhenius theory of acids and bases, in which a water solution of acid is mixed with a water solution of base to form a salt and water; this reaction is complete only if the resulting solution has neither acidic nor of the sanitizer occurred when it contacted the organic material. Chlorine and chlorine dioxide were equally effective in killing spores on apples. Significant reductions of 3.8 to 4.5 log CFU CFU see colony-forming units. per apple were achieved by a treatment concentration of 100 g per mL. Treatment with the peroxyacetic acid sanitizer caused reductions of Bacillus spores on the order of 1 log CFU per apple. Further information. Michael Doyle, Center for Food Safety, University of Georgia, Griffin Campus, Melton Building, Griffin, GA 30223; phone: 770-228-7284; fax: 770-229-3216; email: mdoyle@uga.edu. |
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