Detection of Enterotoxin Coding Genes of Staphylococcus aureus Strains Isolated From Ground Meat in Retail Shops in Mazandaran
2019
Azizkhani, Maryam | Tooryan, Fahimeh
BACKGROUND: Staphylococcus aureus is one of the most important pathogenic bacteria for human that is easily transferred during slaughtering, processing, packaging, storage and handling of meat and meat products as a result of poor hygienic principles, and causes staphylococcal food poisoning. Objectives: The objective of this study was to evaluate the contamination of raw and cooked ground beef in retail shops of Mazandaran to S. aureus and also detection of enterotoxin-producing genes in the isolates. Methods: One-hundred fifty ground beef samples (95 raw and 65 cooked) were collected randomly from retail shops, 21 May-21 July 2017. S. aureus was counted via culturing on Baird Parker Agar medium. Detection of enterotoxins A-E and G, H, I and J producing genes was conducted applying real-time PCR technique. Results: 68% of samples showed S. aureus contamination. The average count in raw and cooked ground beef samples was 3.1×105 cfu/g and 5.7×103 cfu/g, respectively. From 92 S. aureus isolates, 23 isolates (25%) were carrying enterotoxin coding genes; amongst them 15 isolates (65.2%) were carrying just a single gene and the rest more than one gene. Two isolates carrying SEA+ SEC, two isolates SEA+SEE, one isolate SEA+SEG, one isolate SEC+SEI, one isolate SEA+SEC+SEG and one isolate SEE+SEG. Conclusions: These results show that enterotoxigenic S. aureus strains are present on considerable numbers in retail ground meat in Mazandaran.
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