Abstract

The Gram-negative, obligate intracellular bacterium Coxiella burnetii is the causative organism of the zoonosis Q fever and is known for its resistance toward various intra- and extracellular stressors. Infected ruminants such as cattle, sheep, and goats can shed the pathogen in their milk. Pasteurization of raw milk was introduced for the inactivation of C. burnetii and other milk-borne pathogens. Legal regulations for the pasteurization of milk are mostly based on recommendations of the Codex Alimentarius. As described there, C. burnetii is considered as the most heat-resistant non-spore-forming bacterial pathogen in milk and has to be reduced by at least 5 log10-steps during the pasteurization process. However, the corresponding inactivation data for C. burnetii originate from experiments performed more than 60 years ago. Recent scientific findings and the technological progress of modern pasteurization equipment indicate that C. burnetii is potentially more effectively inactivated during pasteurization than demanded in the Codex Alimentarius. In the present study, ultra-high heat-treated milk was inoculated with different C. burnetii field isolates and subsequently heat-treated in a pilot-plant pasteurizer. Kinetic inactivation data in terms of D- and z-values were determined and used for the calculation of heat-dependent log reduction. With regard to the mandatory 5 log10-step reduction of the pathogen, the efficacy of the established heat treatment regime was confirmed, and, in addition, a reduction of the pasteurization temperature seems feasible.

Highlights

  • Coxiella burnetii is an obligate intracellular, Gram-negative bacterium and the causative agent of the zoonosis Q fever (Maurin and Raoult, 1999)

  • The data showed that growth in ACCM2 had no negative effect on heat resistance compared with cell culture-propagated Nine Mile phase II RSA 439 (NMII)

  • Before heat treatment of the C. burnetii field isolates in the pilotplant pasteurizer, the experimental setup was established in preliminary experiments with C. burnetii NMII grown in cell culture and axenic medium

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Summary

Introduction

Coxiella burnetii is an obligate intracellular, Gram-negative bacterium and the causative agent of the zoonosis Q fever (Maurin and Raoult, 1999). It has a wide host range, including ruminants such as cattle, sheep, and goats. These animals are considered as the main source of infection for humans (Baca and Paretsky, 1983; Marrie and Raoult, 1997; Roest et al, 2011). The SCV is assumed to be more resistant to mechanical and osmotic stressors than the LCV (McCaul and Williams, 1981; Sandoz et al, 2016)

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