Publication | Open Access
Detection of Campylobacter jejuni added to foods by using a combined selective enrichment and nucleic acid sequence-based amplification (NASBA)
68
Citations
27
References
1995
Year
Pathogen DetectionFood ContaminantFood ComponentsCampylobacter JejuniFood ControlFood MicrobiologyCampylobacter InfectionsHealth SciencesMolecular MicrobiologyClinical MicrobiologyFood SafetyMicrobial ContaminationFoodborne IllnessBiotechnologyNasba AssayMicrobiologyCombined Selective EnrichmentMedicineNasba AmplificationDiagnostic Microbiology
An assay to detect Campylobacter jejuni in foods that uses a short selective enrichment culture, a simple and rapid isolation procedure, NASBA amplification of RNA, and a nonradioactive in solution hybridization was studied. The presence of high numbers of indigenous flora affected the sensitivity of the assay. However, detection of C. jejuni was possible up to a ratio of indigenous flora to C. jejuni of 10,000:1. Interference by food components was eliminated by centrifugation following the enrichment step. Fourteen food samples artificially inoculated with C. jejuni (1 to 1,000 CFU/10 g) were analyzed with the NASBA assay and the conventional culture method with Campylobacter charcoal differential agar (CCDA). A few false-negative results were obtained by both NASBA (1.42%) and CCDA (2.86%) isolation. Yet the use of enrichment culture and NASBA shortened the analysis time from 6 days to 26 h. The relative simplicity and rapidity of the NASBA assay make it an attractive alternative for detection of C. jejuni in food samples.
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