Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Humblot Christèle, Perez-Pulido R., Akaki D., Loiseau G., Guyot Jean-Pierre. (2012). Prevalence and fate of Bacillus cereus in african traditional cereal-based foods used as infant foods. Journal of Food Protection, 75 (9), p. 1642-1645. ISSN 0362-028X.

Titre du document
Prevalence and fate of Bacillus cereus in african traditional cereal-based foods used as infant foods
Année de publication
2012
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000308781800013
Auteurs
Humblot Christèle, Perez-Pulido R., Akaki D., Loiseau G., Guyot Jean-Pierre
Source
Journal of Food Protection, 2012, 75 (9), p. 1642-1645 ISSN 0362-028X
The objective of the present work was to estimate the prevalence of Bacillus cereus group species in traditional cereal-based lactic acid fermented slurries and nonfermented flours used to prepare infant foods in an African context. High counts on mannitol-egg yolk-polymixin agar medium were determined for the fermented slurries (median, 4.5 x 10(4) CFU/ml of slurry) compared with the nonfermented flours, most of whose counts were lower than 10(-1) CFU/g. Virulence genes were characterized in 60 isolates from 26 traditional cereal-based foods in Ouagadougou (Burkina Faso). Seventy-two and 38% of isolates were positive for the complete set of genes coding for hemolysin BL and nonhemolytic enterotoxin, respectively, suggesting a high enterotoxigenic potential for these foodborne isolates. No potentially emetic toxin producing strains were detected. Because of the high counts found for fermented slurries, survival tests with vegetative cells inoculated in fermented slurries were performed, which showed that growth of B. cereus was inhibited. This result suggests that fermentation in traditional production units is presumably not adequately controlled, enabling growth during any unit operations before fermentation, or even during the fermentation step, when the process was poorly controlled. However, adding nisin (0.1 mg/ml) enabled a 5-log reduction in the B. cereus population in 5 h, suggesting that the use of nisin could be a way to upgrade the hygienic quality of this type of food.
Plan de classement
Nutrition, alimentation [054] ; Biotechnologies [084]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010081606]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010081606
Contact