Islamabad,
Dec 27 : Using technology available through a local company, an Iowa
State University researcher is working on a faster method to detect and
genetically identify salmonella from contaminated foods.
Byron
Brehm-Stecher, an assistant professor of food science and human nutrition, wants
to replace the current system of salmonella detection with a new approach that
can provide DNA sequencing-like results in hours rather than
days.
Brehm-Stecher's collaborator, Advanced Analytical Technologies,
Inc., from Ames, is providing advanced biomedical instruments and reagents for
the research.
The recent results of the research, funded by the Grow Iowa
Values Fund, will be presented at the August meeting of the International
Association for Food Protection in Anaheim, Calif.
Currently, definitive
genetic identification of food-borne pathogens is done using traditional DNA
sequencing methods first developed in the 1980s.
"If you want (DNA)
sequence information now, you first need to run a polymerase chain reaction
(PCR) on total DNA extracted from a sample of contaminated food," said
Brehm-Stecher. "This amplifies DNA from the pathogen you're looking for and will
let you know if salmonella is present or not.
"However, further details
about the pathogen are lacking, like what strain is present. To dig deeper, you
need to run a cycle sequencing reaction -- similar to a long PCR reaction -- and
send the output from this to a DNA sequencing core facility. Results are
available about two days later," said Brehm-Stecher.
"This is not fast
enough to keep up with the pace of today's food production and distribution
networks. We are able to get foods from the farm to the table -- really any
table around the globe -- in a remarkably short period of time," he
added.
Faster detection of specific strains can mean recognizing an
outbreak sooner and stopping tainted food from being delivered and consumed. The
new method might be helpful for investigative agencies, Brehm-Stecher
said.
"Especially for the type of investigation where things are still in
motion. The food has been shipped and you may not know where it is. It may be in
a truck, on a shelf or in some consumer's pantry, so time really is of the
essence," he said.
"Next-generation sequencing tools are available, but
these are still too complex and expensive for routine use in the food industry,"
Brehm-Stecher explained. "New approaches that are able to bridge the gap between
the limitations of traditional PCR and next-generation sequencing could enhance
food safety efforts by providing both rapid presence/absence testing and
detailed genetic characterization of isolates."
You don't have to go
further than the local newspaper to see the depth of the problem. Recent
national outbreaks of salmonella in foods include peanut butter (2007 and 2009),
alfalfa sprouts (2009), black pepper and hydrolyzed vegetable protein (HVP)
(2010). Adding to the problem is the fact that peanut butter, black pepper and
HVP are all base ingredients used in many other food products. Salmonella in
these ingredients has led to thousands of product recalls, hundreds of illnesses
and several deaths, Brehm-Stecher said.
The method being developed at
Iowa State University starts with a rapid PCR reaction that amplifies a
salmonella-specific gene, generating millions of fluorescently labeled copies of
this DNA in about 20 minutes.
Next, instead of cycle sequencing, the PCR
product is purified for five minutes, SNAP71 (a reagent developed by Advanced
Analytical) is added, and the DNA is heated for 10 minutes at 100ÂșC.
This
reaction chemically cuts the labeled salmonella DNA at all adenine and guanine
sites (A's and G's) in the DNA chain.
The result is a complex soup of
fluorescently labeled DNA fragments of all sizes. These fragments are then
separated in a high-voltage electric field by sieving them through a polymer
matrix (a gel) contained in glass capillaries that are 50 microns -- not much
thicker than a human hair. This process separates the DNA fragments according to
their size, from smallest to largest, and each piece is detected as it passes in
front of an intense light source. For a PCR product that's 300 bases long, this
separation and detection process takes approximately 90 minutes.
Because
the SNAP71 reagent cleaves the salmonella DNA only at adenine and guanine, and
not at thymine and cytosine sites (T's and C's), the method is not a direct
replacement for DNA sequencing. Instead, the process rapidly generates a
reproducible pattern of DNA fragments, Brehm-Stecher said.
Salmonella
strains having slightly different DNA sequences within a given gene will yield
different patterns of fragments, allowing discrimination of different strains of
salmonella.
From "food to finish," the whole process can be accomplished
in about two and a half hours.
"We're very excited about this approach
and about the rapid progress we've made since the project began," said
Brehm-Stecher. "The funding for this project has enabled us to work very closely
with Advanced Analytical and accelerate application of their instruments to
solving important food safety problems."
The team at Iowa State
University includes post doctoral researcher Hyun Jung Kim and master's student
Brittany Porter. The group is also working with Cleveland Clinic in
Ohio.
The ultimate goal of the project is faster detection and
characterization of human pathogens from "farm to fork to
physician."
Advanced Analytical's instruments are based on technology
originally developed at Iowa State University in the lab of Ed Yeung, the Robert
Allen Wright Professor and Distinguished Professor in Liberal Arts and Sciences
and professor at the U.S. Department of Energy's Ames
Lab.
Ends
SA/EN
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Faster salmonella detection now possible with new technique
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