Journal of Dairy Science
Volume 92, Issue 6 , Pages 2382-2388, June 2009

Rapid detection of Salmonella in milk by combined immunomagnetic separation-polymerase chain reaction assay

  • B. Mercanoglu Taban

      Affiliations

    • Gazi University, Vocational School of Health Services, Golbasi, Ankara, Turkey
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author.
  • ,
  • U. Ben

      Affiliations

    • Hacettepe University, Faculty of Engineering, Food Engineering Department, Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey
  • ,
  • S.A. Aytac

      Affiliations

    • Hacettepe University, Faculty of Engineering, Food Engineering Department, Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey

Received 8 July 2008; accepted 10 February 2009.

Abstract 

During the past few years, milk has presented a risk of Salmonella contamination; it has been implicated as the cause in several outbreaks of salmonellosis. Because conventional detection methods require 5 to 7 d for completion and involve several subcultivation stages followed by biochemical and serological tests, rapid and sensitive methods have been sought, mainly at the DNA level. Therefore, a study including milk samples was conducted to evaluate the performance of a combination of 2 techniques—immunomagnetic separation and polymerase chain reaction (PCR)—for the detection of Salmonella. The 16-, 14-, 12-, 10-, and 8-h nonselective pre-enrichment steps before immunomagnetic separation and the high-pure DNA preparation method before PCR were used in a combined assay. Milk samples, which were found to be Salmonella-negative by a reference method, were first inoculated with Salmonella Enteritidis. Next, the shortest pre-enrichment time that is required for detection of 1 or 10 cfu of Salmonella/mL by combined immunomagnetic separation-PCR assay was found by using 16-, 14-, 12-, 10-, and 8-h incubation periods. The detection limit using a 16-, 14-, or 12-h nonselective pre-enrichment was 1 to 10 cfu/mL. However, the sensitivity decreased to 101 and 102 cfu/mL, respectively, when 10- and 8-h pre-enrichments were used. This assay, in conjunction with a 12-h pre-enrichment, proved to be rapid (overall 16h) and sensitive (1–10 cfu/mL) for the detection of Salmonella in milk samples and promising for routine use in the detection of Salmonella in milk.

Key words: immunomagnetic separation, polymerase chain reaction, Salmonella

 

PII: S0022-0302(09)70553-3

doi:10.3168/jds.2008-1537

Journal of Dairy Science
Volume 92, Issue 6 , Pages 2382-2388, June 2009