Faculty of Applied Sciences
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Item Inactivation of heat adapted and chlorine adapted Listeria monocytogenes ATCC 7644 on tomatoes using sodium dodecyl sulphate, levulinic acid and sodium hypochlorite solution(PAGEpress, 2017-04) Ijabadeniyi, Oluwatosin Ademola; Mnyandu, ElizabethThe effectiveness of sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS), sodium hypochlorite solution and levulinic acid in reducing the survival of heat adapted and chlorine adapted Listeria monocytogenes ATCC 7644 was evaluated. The results against heat adapted L. monocytognes revealed that sodium hypochlorite solution was the least effective, achieving log reduction of 2.75, 2.94 and 3.97 log CFU/mL for 1, 3 e and 5 minutes, respectively. SDS was able to achieve 8 log reduction for both heat adapted and chlorine adapted bacteria. When used against chlorine adapted L. monocytogenes sodium hypochlorite solution achieved log reduction of 2.76, 2.93 and 3.65 log CFU/mL for 1, 3 and 5 minutes, respectively. Using levulinic acid on heat adapted bacteria achieved log reduction of 3.07, 2.78 and 4.97 log CFU/mL for 1, 3, 5 minutes, respectively. On chlorine adapted bacteria levulinic acid achieved log reduction of 2.77, 3.07 and 5.21 log CFU/mL for 1, 3 and 5 minutes, respectively. Using a mixture of 0.05% SDS and 0.5% o levulinic acid on heat adapted bacteria achieved log reduction of 3.13, 3.32 and 4.79 log CFU/mL for 1, 3 and 5 minutes while on chlorine adapted bacteria it achieved 3.20, 3.33 and 5.66 log CFU/mL, respectively. Increasing contact time also increased log reduction for both test pathogens. A storage period of up to 72 hours resulted in progressive log reduction for both test pathogens. Results also revealed that there was a significant difference (P ≤ 0.05) between contact times, storage times and sanitizers. Findings from this study can be used to select suitable sanitizers and contact times for heat adapted and chlorine adapted L. monocytogenes in the fresh produce industry.Item Inactivation of Listeria monocytogenes ATCC7 644 Biofilms using Sodium Dodecyl Sulphate, Levulinic Acid and Sodium Hypochlorite solution(MN Khan, 2014-06) Singh, Suren; Mnyandu, Elizabeth; Oluwatosin Ademola IjabadeniyiA study was done to assess the effectiveness of 200 ppm sodium hypochlorite (chlorine), 1% sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) and 0.5% levulinic acid in reducing L. monocytogenes ATCC7644 biofilms. 0.05% SDS and 0.5% levulinic acid were also used combined (mixture). After treatment with sanitizers, the biofilms were stored at 4°C for up to 72 hours and samples were tested at 0, 24, 48 and 72 hours. The contact times were varied to 1, 3, 5 minutes. Results revealed that biofilms were still viable after treatment with these sanitizers. There was no significance difference between storage times. Varying contact times from 1 to 3 minutes did not show a significance difference however there was a significance difference when the contact time was increased to 5 minutes. Non-adapted biofilms had highest log reductions compared to chlorine adapted and heat adapted biofilms. Treatment with chlorine was least effective in reducing viability of biofilms, followed by levulinic acid then a mixture of levulinic acid and SDS. SDS used alone had highest log reductions. Application of sanitizers at different contact times combined or individually may be successful in reducing biofilms in food manufacturing units. A careful selection of sanitizer for each specific pathogen may be required if sanitizers are to work effectively against biofilms.