Abstract

As mild decontamination treatments are gaining more and more interest due to increased consumer demands for fresh foods, it is of great importance to establish the influence of decontamination treatments on the subsequent bacterial behaviour under suboptimal storage conditions. For this purpose Campylobacter jejuni cells treated with lactic acid (LA, 3% lactic acid, pH 4.0, 2 min) or chlorine dioxide (ClO 2, 20 ppm, 2 min) were inoculated in Bolton broth (pH 6.0) and incubated under 80% O 2/20% N 2, 80% CO 2/20% N 2, air or micro-aerophilic (10% CO 2/85% N 2/5% O 2) atmosphere, at 4 °C during 7 days. Treatment with water served as a control. The most suppressive atmosphere for the survival of C. jejuni was O 2-rich atmosphere, followed by air, micro-aerophilic and CO 2-rich atmosphere. The survival of C. jejuni was dependent on the type of initial decontamination treatment, with water treated cells showing the greatest survival followed by LA and ClO 2 treated cells. Intracellular pH (pH i ) of individual C. jejuni cells was determined using Fluorescence Ratio Imaging Microscopy (FRIM). At all tested conditions, different subpopulation of the cells could be distinguished based on their pH i values. The pH i response was independent on the surrounding atmosphere since similar distribution of the subpopulations was observed for all tested atmospheres. However, the pH i response was dependent on the initial decontamination treatment. The investigation of intracellular parameters gave an insight into pathogen behaviour under stressful conditions at intracellular level. The results obtained in this study highlighted the importance of combining decontamination technologies with subsequent preservation techniques to the control survival and growth of foodborne pathogens.

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