Abstract

Besides its health and spoilage hazards, Escherichia coli is a process hygiene indicator for cheeses made from milk that has undergone heat treatment. Hence, its ability to persist in cheesemaking plant environment and equipment is important. In total, 120 samples from two producing plants were analysed and 72 E. coli isolates were obtained. The target was to find out whether there is a difference in heat-resistance between persistent and non-persistent E. coli strains. The strains were selected using macrorestriction analysis and recurrent detection in cheesemaking plants hereby: one strain persisting in brine for blue-veined cheeses, two strains persisting in brine for hard cheeses and one non-persistent strain from raw material. Their D(50)-values were 196; 417; 370 and 182 min, respectively, D(59)-values ranged from 20 to 32 min and z-values were 7.5; 6.6; 8.1 and 9.0 °C, respectively. The non-persistent strain was the least resistant to heating to 50 °C but it was not the least resistant generally. All tested strains were highly heat-resistant and carried genes of the heat resistance locus LHR1 and/or LHR2. Our results emphasise the need to screen for the presence of LHR genes and the occurrence of heat-resistant E. coli in cheese production where they could survive sub-pasteurisation temperatures and contaminate the manufacturing environment and finished products.

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