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Microb Biotechnol 2016 May;9(3):279-92

Recent and emerging innovations in Salmonella detection: a food and environmental perspective.

Bell RL, Jarvis KG, Ottesen AR, McFarland MA, Brown EW

Abstract

Salmonella is a diverse genus of Gram-negative bacilli and a major foodborne pathogen responsible for more than a million illnesses annually in the United States alone. Rapid, reliable detection and identification of this pathogen in food and environmental sources is key to safeguarding the food supply. Traditional microbiological culture techniques have been the 'gold standard' for State and Federal regulators. Unfortunately, the time to result is too long to effectively monitor foodstuffs, especially those with very short shelf lives. Advances in traditional microbiology and molecular biology over the past 25 years have greatly improved the speed at which this pathogen is detected. Nonetheless, food and environmental samples possess a distinctive set of challenges for these newer, more rapid methodologies. Furthermore, more detailed identification and subtyping strategies still rely heavily on the availability of a pure isolate. However, major shifts in DNA sequencing technologies are meeting this challenge by advancing the detection, identification and subtyping of Salmonella towards a culture-independent diagnostic framework. This review will focus on current approaches and state-of-the-art next-generation advances in the detection, identification and subtyping of Salmonella from food and environmental sources.


Category: Journal Article, Review
PubMed ID: #27041363 DOI: 10.1111/1751-7915.12359
PubMed Central ID: #PMC4835567
Includes FDA Authors from Scientific Area(s): Food
Entry Created: 2016-04-05 Entry Last Modified: 2016-05-21
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