Microbial contamination of fruit and vegetables and the behaviour of enteropathogens in the phyllosphere : a review.
Joanna Heaton,Keith Jones +1 more
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TL;DR: Improved knowledge of plant–microbe interactions and the interaction between epiphytic and immigrant micro‐organisms on the leaf surface will lead to novel methods to limit enteropathogen survival in the phyllosphere.
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Abstract: Consumption of fruit and vegetable products is commonly viewed as a potential risk factor for infection with enteropathogens such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli O157, with recent outbreaks linked to lettuce, spinach and tomatoes. Routes of contamination are varied and include application of organic wastes to agricultural land as fertilizer, contamination of waters used for irrigation with faecal material, direct contamination by livestock, wild animals and birds and postharvest issues such as worker hygiene. The ability of pathogens to survive in the field environment has been well studied, leading to the implementation of guidelines such as the Safe Sludge Matrix, which aim to limit the likelihood of viable pathogens remaining at point-of-sale. The behaviour of enteropathogens in the phyllosphere is a growing field of research, and it is suggested that inclusion in phyllosphere biofilms or internalization within the plant augments the survival. Improved knowledge of plant-microbe interactions and the interaction between epiphytic and immigrant micro-organisms on the leaf surface will lead to novel methods to limit enteropathogen survival in the phyllosphere.
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Citations
Reported Foodborne Outbreaks Due to Fresh Produce in the United States and European Union: Trends and Causes
Raquel M. Callejón,M. Isabel Rodriguez-Naranjo,Cristina Ubeda,Ruth Hornedo-Ortega,M. Carmen Garcia-Parrilla,Ana M. Troncoso +5 more
TL;DR: Norovirus is shown to be responsible for most of the produce-related outbreaks, followed by Salmonella, which was the leading cause of multistate produce outbreaks in the United States and was the pathogen involved in the majority of sprouts-associated outbreaks.
634
Salmonella biofilms: An overview on occurrence, structure, regulation and eradication
TL;DR: Insight into the pathogen's complex biofilm process will eventually lead to further unraveling of its intricacies and more efficient strategies to combat Salmonella biofilms, as well as the potential of combination therapy.
512
Sources and contamination routes of microbial pathogens to fresh produce during field cultivation: A review.
TL;DR: Overall, microbiological hazards are significant; therefore, ways to reduce sources of contamination and a deeper understanding of pathogen survival and growth on fresh produce in the field are required to reduce risk to human health and the associated economic consequences.
485
Salmonellosis Outbreaks in the United States Due to Fresh Produce: Sources and Potential Intervention Measures
TL;DR: An increasing number of salmonellosis outbreaks are occurring as a result of contaminated produce, and several produce items specifically have been identified in outbreaks, and the ability of Salmonella to attach or internalize into vegetables and fruits may be factors that make these produce items more likely to be sources of Salamba.
461
Internalization of Salmonella enterica in Leaves Is Induced by Light and Involves Chemotaxis and Penetration through Open Stomata
Yulia Kroupitski,Dana Golberg,Eduard Belausov,Riky Pinto,Dvora Swartzberg,David Granot,Shlomo Sela +6 more
TL;DR: Results imply that the pathogen is attracted to nutrients produced de novo by photosynthetically active cells and suggest that either Salmonella antigens are not well recognized by the stoma-based innate immunity or that this pathogen has evolved means to evade it.
314
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