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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 1999, p. 2396-2401, Vol. 65, No. 6
Department of Biology, St. Mary's College of
Maryland, St. Mary's City, Maryland 20686,1 and
Food Research Institute, University of Wisconsin
Received 10 November 1998/Accepted 23 March 1999
A by-product of glucose produced during sterilization (121°C, 15 lb/in2, 15 min) at neutral pH and in the presence of
phosphate (i.e., phosphate-buffered saline) was bactericidal to
Escherichia coli O157:H7 (ATCC 43895). Other six-carbon
(fructose and galactose) and five-carbon (arabinose, ribose, and
xylose) reducing sugars also produced a toxic by-product under the same
conditions. Fructose and the five-carbon sugars yielded the most
bactericidal activity. Glucose concentrations of 1% (wt/vol) resulted
in a 99.9% decline in the CFU of stationary-phase cells per milliliter
in 2 days at 25°C. An rpoS mutant
(pRR10::rpoS) of strain 43895 (FRIK 816-3) was
significantly (P < 0.001) more sensitive to the
glucose-phosphate by-product than the parent strain, as glucose
concentrations from 0.05 to 0.25% resulted in a 2- to
3-log10 reduction in CFU per milliliter in 2 days at
25°C. Likewise, log-phase cells of the wild-type strain, 43895, were
significantly more sensitive (P < 0.001) to the
glucose-phosphate by-product than were stationary-phase cells, which is
consistent with the stability of rpoS and the regulation of
rpoS-regulated genes. The bactericidal effect of the
glucose-phosphate by-product was reduced when strains ATCC 43895 and
FRIK 816-3 were incubated at a low temperature (4°C). Also, growth in
glucose-free medium (i.e., nutrient broth) did not alleviate the
sensitivity to the glucose-phosphate by-product and excludes the
possibility of substrate-accelerated death as the cause of the
bactericidal effect observed. The glucose-phosphate by-product was also
bactericidal to Salmonella typhimurium, Shigella dysenteriae, and a Klebsiella sp. Attempts to
identify the glucose-phosphate by-product were unsuccessful. These
studies demonstrate the production of a glucose-phosphate by-product
bactericidal to E. coli O157:H7 and the protective effects
afforded by rpoS-regulated gene products. Additionally, the
detection of sublethally injured bacteria may be compromised by the
presence of this by-product in recovery media.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Lethality of a Heat- and Phosphate-Catalyzed
Glucose By-Product to Escherichia coli O157:H7 and
Partial Protection Conferred by the rpoS
Regulon
Madison,
Madison, Wisconsin 53706-11872
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Dept. of
Biology, St. Mary's College of Maryland, St. Mary's City, MD 20686. Phone: (301) 862-0375. Fax: (301) 862-0996. E-mail:
JJByrd{at}osprey.smcm.edu.
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