Title: Martin Wiedmann
1Microbial food safety issues real world
problems that get undergrads excited about
microbiology
- Martin Wiedmann
- Department of Food Science
- 412 Stocking Hall
- Cornell University
- Phone 607-254-2838
- E-mail mw16_at_cornell.edu
2Foodborne diseases
- Latest CDC estimates indicate the following
annual burdens due to foodborne diseases in the
US per year - 325,000 serious illnesses resulting in
hospitalizations - 76 million cases of gastrointestinal illnesses
- 5,000 deaths
3Transmission of foodborne diseases
Animal feed/environment/protozoans
Manure
Food animals
Plant derived raw products
Animal derived food products
Food Processing Plants
RTE Foods
Humans
4Salmonella
- About 1.4 million cases annually in the US
resulting in approx. 550 deaths - Mostly gastrointestinal syndrome, but also
invasive disease - Bioterrorism agent
- Many different subtypes, e.g., Salmonella Typhi,
Salmonella Dublin, Salmonella Typhimurium - While cases caused by many foodborne pathogens
(Listeria, Campylobacter, E. coli O157H7) have
decreased over the years, Salmonella case numbers
have not - Apparent increase in Salmonella resistant to one
or more antibiotics has been observed
5Antibiotic resistant Salmonella
- In 2002, 22 of Salmonella Newport, 27 of
Salmonella Typhimurium isolates, and 8 of
Salmonella Heidelberg displayed multi-drug
resistance (MDR) - MDR Salmonella Typhimurium isolates commonly
shows two resistance type (i) resistance to
ampicillin, kanamycin, streptomycin,
sulfamethoxazole, and tetracycline or (ii)
resistance to ampicillin, chloramphenicol,
streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole, and tetracycline
6Salmonella as bioterrorism agent
Torok TJ, Tauxe RV, Wise RP, Livengood JR,
Sokolow R, Mauvais S, Birkness KA, Skeels MR,
Horan JM, Foster LR. A large community outbreak
of salmonellosis caused by intentional
contamination of restaurant salad bars.JAMA.
1997 Aug 6278(5)389-95.
7Listeria monocytogenes
- Causes septicemia, abortion and encephalitis in
humans and in animals - Incubation period 7 - 60 days
- Human listeriosis occurs in both epidemic and
sporadic cases - Affects predominantly elderly and
immuno-compromised people, pregnant women and
newborns. - Approx. 2,500 human cases/year in the U.S.,
resulting in 350 - 450 deaths/year - Responsible for majority of microbial food recalls
8E. coli O157H7/Enterohemorhagic E. coli (EHEC)
- Severe human disease transmitted through many
foods, including undercooked meat, raw milk,
apple cider, raw vegetables, etc. - Also transmitted by other means including
drinking water, direct animal - human
transmission - Approx. 60,000 human cases and 50 deaths annually
in US - Symptoms include bloody diarrhea, hemolytic
uremic syndrome (kidney damage) - Children are particularly at risk
9Noroviruses
- Noroviruses are most common cause of acute
gastroenteritis in the United States and are
believed to be the most common cause of food
borne illnesses (23 million total cases annually,
9.2 million foodborne) - Often associated with infections/outbreaks in
crowding situations (cruise ships, homes for
elderly etc.) - Noroviruses cannot be grown in the laboratory
- Studies on heat resistance and disinfection
strategies are difficult to perform - Detection in foods and infected humans requires
electron microscopy or molecular biology
approaches - Sources are most likely humans with infection
that prepare or handle foods - Virus appears to be able to survive on surfaces
for days
10Norwalk-like viruses When the runs can slow you
down
- In January 1999, an outbreak of viral
gastroenteritis affected more than 300 people who
attended a metropolitan concert hall over a 5-day
period. - The first case was a concert attendee who vomited
in the auditorium and adjacent male toilet - Gastrointestinal illness occurred among members
of 8/15 school parties who attended the following
day. - Children who sat on the same level of the
auditorium as the first case were much more
likely to be ill than those seated elsewhere - Transmission most likely occurred through direct
contact with contaminated fomites (any inanimate
object or substance capable of absorbing,
retaining, and transporting contagious or
infectious organisms from one individual to
another).
11Case study human listeriosis outbreak
12Human listeriosis cases in NYS 1/97-10/98
13Ribotyping results - November 8, 9 pm
14Ribotyping results - November 8, 12 pm
15Epidemic curve for 1/97 - 2/99 in NYS
16Follow-Up investigations by NYSDOH, Cornell
University, CDC and other state health departments
17Subtyping of human isolates - summary
- More than 100 human listeriosis cases and 21
deaths in more than 15 states all caused by the
identical DNA subtype
18The outbreak source?
- Patients included in this outbreak were
significantly more likely to have eaten hot dogs
then controls - November matching subtypes found in opened
packages of deli meats collected in retail
(including deli meats produced by Sara Lee) by
NYSAGM - Middle of December L. monocytogenes isolated
from opened package of hot dogs from affected
patient subsequent tests reveal L. monocytogenes
DUP-1044A contamination of unopened packages - December 22, 1998 Sara Lee announces recall of
hot dogs and other packaged meats produced at its
Bil Mar Foods unit in Zeeland, MI
19DNA fingerprinting methods
20Molecular characterization and taxonomy
Bacterium 1
Bacterium 2
1300 kb
1200 kb
Bact 1
Bact 2
Gel Electrophoresis (separates DNA pieces by size)
21PCR-RFLP characterization of hly
- PCR amplification of complete hly ORF, followed
by restriction enzyme digest using HhaI and Hpa
II - Differentiates 8 different hlyA alleles
M 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10
Uneven lanes HhaI Even lanes HpaII
22Examples of different L. monocytogenes ribotypes
23PFGE Types
C
C
C
24DNA sequencing-based subtyping
Isolate 1 AACATGCAGACTGACGATTCGACGTAGGCTAGACGTTGAC
TG Isolate 2 AACATGCAGACTGACGATTCGTCGTAGGCTAGACGTT
GACTG Isolate 3 AACATGCAGACTGACGATTCGACGTAGGCTAGAC
GTTGACTG Isolate 4 AACATGCATACTGACGATTCGACGAAGGCTA
GACGTTGACTG
25Use of DNA fingerprinting to control Listeria
in food processing plants
26 Subtyping Results seafood processing plant
Sample Ribotype Sample Source
RiboPrint Pattern
Sample Source
VISIT 1
1039C (E) Floor drain, raw materials
area 1039C (E) Floor drain, hallway to
finished area 1039C (IP) Troll Red King
Salmon, in brine, head area 1039C (IP)
Troll Red King Salmon, in brine, belly area 1039C
(IP) Brine, Troll Red King Salmon 1039C
(IP) Faroe Island Salmon, in brine, head
area 1039C (F) Smoked Sable 1039C
(F) Cold-Smoked Norwegian Salmon 1044A
(E) Floor drain, brining cold room 1 1044A
(R) Raw Troll Red King Salmon, head
area 1044A (IP) Brine, Faroe Island
Salmon 1045 (R) Raw Troll Red King
Salmon, belly area 1045 (IP) Faroe
Island Salmon, in brine, head area 1053
(IP) Norwegian Salmon, in brine 1062
(E) Floor drain 1, raw materials
preparation 1039C (E) Floor drain 1,
raw materials preparation 1039C (E)
Floor drain, brining cold room 1 1039C
(E) Floor drain 2, raw materials
preparation 1039C (E) Floor drain 2,
raw materials receiving 1039C (E) Floor
drain, finished product area 1039C (E)
Floor drain, hallway to finished area 1039C
(IP) Brine, Troll Red King Salmon 1039C
(F) Smoked Sable 1044A (IP) Sable, in
brine 1044A (IP) Brine, Faroe Island
Salmon 1062 (IP) Brine, Norwegian
Salmon
VISIT 2
VISIT 3
27 Subtyping Results - cont.
28L. monocytogenes persistence in plants
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302000 US outbreak - Environmental persistence of
L. monocytogenes?
- 1988 one human listeriosis case linked to hot
dogs produced by plant X - 2000 29 human listeriosis cases linked to sliced
turkey meats from plant X
31Ideas for food micro activities for undergrads
- Brainstorm about (1) what microorganisms cause
foodborne illness (and how much), (2) what foods
cause foodborne illness (and why), and (3) how
can you reduce your personal risk of foodborne
illness - Use current examples (ProMed FSNet)
- Lab activities (stage outbreak investigation)
- Can include simple (detection with selective
media) to fairly complex (DNA sequencing with
bioinformatics) lab activities
32Food Micro resources
- FSNet http//www.foodsafety.ksu.edu
- ProMed http//www.promedmail.org
- The PathogenTracker game http//scicentr1.tc.cor
nell.edu/pathogentrackergame/Intro/introduction/we
lcome.htm - FightBac http//www.fightbac.org/
- Encyclopedia of Food Microbiology (can be made
available on-line through institutional
libraries) - Food Microbiology an Introduction (ASM Press)
- Food Microbiology Fundamentals and Frontiers
more advanced (ASM Press) - Modern Food Microbiology (CHIPS)
- Food Microbiology Laboratory (Taylor Francis
Ltd)
33Summary and conclusions
- Foodborne disease affects everyone and foodborne
disease burdens in US and internationally are not
trivial - Foodborne disease is a highly suitable topic for
introducing undergrads to many/all concepts in
microbiology - Undergrad food micro education can be as simple
and as complex as you wish
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