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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1999, p. 3828-3833, Vol. 65, No. 9
Department of Microbiology,
Received 17 February 1999/Accepted 12 June 1999
Molecular typing has been used previously to identify and trace
dissemination of pathogenic and spoilage bacteria associated with food
processing. Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) is a novel
DNA fingerprinting technique which is considered highly reproducible
and has high discriminatory power. This technique was used to
fingerprint 88 Pseudomonas fluorescens and
Pseudomonas putida strains that were previously isolated
from plate counts of carcasses at six processing stages and various
equipment surfaces and environmental sources of a poultry abattoir.
Clustering of the AFLP patterns revealed a high level of diversity
among the strains. Six clusters (clusters I through VI) were delineated at an arbitrary Dice coefficient level of 0.65; clusters III (31 strains) and IV (28 strains) were the largest clusters. More than one-half (52.3%) of the strains obtained from carcass samples, which
may have represented the resident carcass population, grouped together
in cluster III. By contrast, 43.2% of the strains from most of the
equipment surfaces and environmental sources grouped together in
cluster IV. In most cases, the clusters in which carcass strains from
processing stages grouped corresponded to the clusters in which strains
from the associated equipment surfaces and/or environmental sources
were found. This provided evidence that there was cross-contamination
between carcasses and the abattoir environment at the DNA level. The
AFLP data also showed that strains were being disseminated from the
beginning to the end of the poultry processing operation, since many
strains associated with carcasses at the packaging stage were members
of the same clusters as strains obtained from carcasses after the
defeathering stage.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism
Fingerprinting of Pseudomonas Strains from a Poultry
Processing Plant
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of the Witwatersrand, Private Bag 3, Wits,
2050, South Africa. Phone: 27 716 4022. Fax: 27 339 7377. E-mail:
alex{at}gecko.biol.wits.ac.za.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1999, p. 3828-3833, Vol. 65, No. 9
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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