Abstract

To define PCR-based detectability of Staphylococcus aureus in raw milk and intermediate products of raw milk cheese making in the presence of a complex background microflora by targetting different specific genes harboured by a single strain. The strain Staph. aureus FRI 137 harbouring nuc, sec, seg, seh and sei genes was used in this study. Raw milk artificially contaminated by different concentrations of Staph. aureus FRI 137 was employed in dairy processing resembling traditional raw milk cheese making. Samples of milk and curds were PCR-analysed after DNA extraction by targetting all the above genes. The pathogen was detected when the initial contamination was 10(4) CFU ml(-1) by amplification of nuc and seh genes. 10(5) and 10(7) CFU ml(-1) were needed when seg or sei and sec genes were targetted, respectively. Enrichment cultures from raw milk and curd samples proved to increase the detection limit of 1 log on average. The direct detection of the pathogen in the raw material and dairy intermediates of production can provide rapid results and highlight the presence of loads of Staph. aureus potentially representing the risk of intoxication. However, every target gene to be used in the analysis has to be studied in advance in a system similar to the real case in order to determine the level of contamination potentially predictable. The detection in real dairy systems of significant loads of Staph. aureus by multiple targets PCR can be more accurate.

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