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Challenges to Developing Real-Time Methods to Detect Pathogens in Foods Despite progress, real-time nucleic acid-based assays to detect pathogens in foods are not yet suitable for routine use Lee-Ann Jaykus ven with improved methods for detecting pathogens in foods and environmental samples, microbiologists so mandated often face a “needle-ina-haystack” challenge. How does one detect small numbers of pathogens amid large numbers of harmless background microflora in a large and complex sample matrix? Traditional pathogen detection methods rely on culture enrichment, selective and differential plating, and additional biochemical and serological methods, making for analyses that may easily extend several days. Over the years, more rapid methods have replaced plating steps with DNA hybridization or enzyme immunoassays. However, even these methods detect at best 103-104 CFU/g of target pathogens, meaning that culture enrichment steps are still necessary, as is confirmation for presumptively positive results. The overall time savings is minimal. However, enzyme-based nucleic acid amplification methods, including the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and nucleic acid sequence-based amplification (NASBA), represent a significant advance, one that has the potential to speed the overall analysis by replacing culture enrichment procedures with those that amplify specific nucleic acid sequences. Moreover, these new methods are highly specific and can be used to identify microorganisms that cannot be readily cultured. E Important Technical Challenges in Applying Rapid Methods to Food Samples Despite these advantages, however, those hoping to routinely use nucleic acid amplification methods for detecting pathogens in food and environmental samples still face several techni- cal challenges, including: (i) low levels of contaminating pathogens; (ii) high volumes or high mass (ⱖ25 ml or grams) compared to amplification volumes (⬍10 l); and (iii) residual matrix components that inhibit enzymatic reactions. Additional challenges include the need to confirm findings by time-consuming procedures and satisfying industry and regulatory concerns when nucleic acid sequences from nonviable pathogens are detected. Thus, researchers in this field often report that PCR or NASBA detection limits prove no better than 102-103 CFU/g of food product, which is only slightly better than what they report using ELISA and DNA hybridization methods. By and large, culture enrichments are still necessary to amplify targets before they can be detected using nucleic acid amplification procedures. Recent developments, referred to as real-time nucleic acid amplification technologies, can further reduce overall test times by replacing timeconsuming postamplification electrophoresis or hybridization methods with methods based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) (Fig. 1). Of particular note are two commercial systems—the TaqMan®, which is available from Applied Biosystems in Foster City, Calif., (http: //home.appliedbiosystems.com) and the NucliSens®, which is available from bioMerieux of Durham, N.C. (http://www.biomerieux.com). The TaqMan® assay capitalizes on the endogeonous 5⬘3 3⬘ exonuclease activity of Taq DNA polymerase by including a dual fluorophore-labeled oligonucleotide probe during the PCR amplification cycle. The fluorescence produced by the 5⬘ reporter dye ordinarily is quenched by the 3⬘ quencher dye. However, if the probe hybridizes to its complementary amplicon Lee-Ann Jaykus is an associate professor in the Departments of Food Science and Microbiology, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh. Volume 69, Number 7, 2003 / ASM News Y 341 FIGURE 1 Representative detection and confirmation methods for nucleic acid amplification. (A) Traditional agarose gel electrophoresis and Southern hybridization; (B) Real-time PCR detection of the tdh gene using the TaqMan® assay in serial 10-fold dilutions of an overnight V. parahaemolyticus culture (courtesy of Angelo DePaola, FDA Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory); (C) Fluoroscein (FAM)-labeled molecular beacon used in NASBA reaction for the assessment of enterotoxin gene expression in Bacillus cereus grown in skim milk in late log/early stationary phase (courtesy of John McKillip, Louisiana Tech University). “mate” during the PCR reactions, the 5⬘ nuclease activity of Taq polymerase lops off the fluorescent dye molecule, which fluoresces freely in the absence of a neighboring quencher molecule. Meanwhile, the NucliSens® Basic Kit is based on NASBA, a transcription-driven isothermal RNA amplification method. bioMerieux recently introduced its NucliSens® EasyQ system, which combines NASBA with molecular beacons, which consists of a dual fluorophore-labeled oligonucleotide probe that is incorporated into the amplification cocktail. The molecular beacon probe sequence is flanked by a hairpin stem that is formed by two complementary (yet unrelated) arm sequences, forming a stem-and-loop structure. One of the arms is labeled with a fluorescent moiety, the other with a quencher that is kept in proximity because of the complementarity of the arm sequences. The probe is added prior to NASBA, and if hybridization to specific amplicons occurs during amplification, this proximity is disrupted, leaving the fluorophore free to fluoresce. These assays give results in real time because the amplicon can be detected and confirmed 342 Y ASM News / Volume 69, Number 7, 2003 while it is being amplified. In theory, these assay designs could enable nucleic acid amplification to replace culture enrichment, while the newly generated amplicons that hybridize to fluorescent probes and are immediately detected could replace otherwise time-consuming culture confirmation steps. Because these two steps are combined, total testing time could be dropped from days to hours (Fig. 2). However, despite the promise of these real-time detection strategies, their routine use for detecting pathogens in food and environmental matrices will remain limited until scientists are able to adequately address the needle-in-a-haystack dilemma. Concentrating Pathogens Initially Can Improve Overall Analysis Separating, concentrating, and purifying foodborne pathogens from sample matrices before undertaking nucleic acid amplification steps improves the overall analysis (Fig. 3). Such procedures are necessary when detecting viral agents from foods because, unlike those bacterial Hold the Shellfish Lee-Ann Jaykus says emphatically that she will not eat two foods, raw shellfish and sprouts. Her selective abstinence is not surprising because her research focuses on microorganisms that contaminate foods–and both these foods are notorious for being contaminated by nasty microorganisms. “I tell my students that when you are eating raw shellfish, you’re eating poop and all,” she says, laughing. She learned this as a graduate student when she studied raw shellfish as part of her doctoral research. Her aversion to sprouts came later, about six years ago, when her own undergraduate students decided to study the microbiological quality of sprouts as their class project. “I was amazed when the results came in.” she says. “When I saw the levels of bacteria, I stopped eating them. It’s very difficult to control bacterial contamination on seeds. The way they are grown—in high moisture at body temperature— it’s like putting bacteria in an incubator with a bunch of food and letting them go crazy.” Nevertheless, Jaykus has great faith in the safety of the U.S. food supply, although she wishes there were faster methods for detecting problems when they crop up. She became aware of the need for faster tests during the mid-to late 1980s, a time of several high-profile food-poisoning outbreaks. She was working in a lab in Modesto, Calif., where her duties included conducting tests for bac- teria in food products. “It was just taking too long,” she says, referring to the wait before results were ready. “The processors wanted their results, and we couldn’t turn it over fast enough. “We really have to develop alternative sample processing methods,” she adds. “We need more scientists to be working in that area, and better technology to deal with these issues. We are working with a couple of different technologies to try to concentrate bacteria out of representative food sample sizes, and also technologies to concentrate and purify nucleic acids that would provide evidence of contamination.” Jaykus developed an interest in food science during her undergraduate days at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, where she began studying medical technology. “I was a little worried I was going to be bored,” she says. “Somebody told me I should look into food science because it was all of these different disciplines together, including biology, chemistry, and engineering. So I took my first microbiology course and loved it. I really liked that you could see the test tubes turn different colors during experiments. It was very definitive–if it turned a color, you got what you wanted. Now that I’m a Ph.D., I know that it’s not always that straightforward.” What she likes today is the ability to combine her formal training in food science with her love of biology “and apply it in a very pathogens that can be cultured, viruses are inert in food matrices. Unfortunately, separating and concentrating bacterial pathogens from foods can prove difficult because, unlike many viruses, bacterial cells are highly sensitive to agents such practical matter. Everybody is interested because everybody eats.” Jaykus grew up in Ridgefield, Conn., the eldest of three girls. Her father is a land surveyor, her mother teaches the fifth grade. She earned her B.S. and M.S. degrees in food science at Purdue University and her Ph.D. at the School of Public Health at the University of North Carolina (UNC) in Chapel Hill. She currently is an associate professor in the food science department at North Carolina State University (NCSU) in Raleigh. She is married to a pediatric oncologist who is a professor at UNC Chapel Hill. Between them, they have four teenagers. Before taking a position at NCSU, Jaykus worked as a quality control manager for FritoLay, Inc. and as the microbiology division manager for Dairy and Food Labs, Inc., in Modesto. Jaykus good-naturedly fields comments about her cooking and eating habits. “My husband says I cook meat to death,” she says. “We eat a lot of baked Frito-Lay products. It took a while to get used to them, but once you do, it becomes part of your diet. At 44, with high cholesterol, I no longer can eat that high-fat stuff anymore.” However, she adds, “Since it was one of my guilty pleasures, I have to say this: there is nothing better than hot Fritos, or potato chips, right out of the fryer.” Marlene Cimons Marlene Cimons is a freelance writer in Bethesda, Md. as organic solvents and detergents that are used to remove matrix-associated interfering compounds. Approaches for concentrating bacteria need to address three issues that plague environmen- Volume 69, Number 7, 2003 / ASM News Y 343 FIGURE 2 A comparison of traditional and real-time detection methods. tal and food microbiologists, namely (i) how to separate pathogens from sample particulates; (ii) how to remove inhibitory compounds associated with the matrix; and (iii) how to reduce the sample size and also recover nearly 100% of the target organism(s). Depending upon the needs of the analyst, methods may be designed to concentrate either entire bacterial populations or only specific segments. Preferably, these methods will not destroy viability, meaning subsequent culture methods will work if needed. Options for Concentrating Bacteria Methods for separating bacteria from a food matrix and then concentrating them depend on several chemical, physical, and biological principles (Table 1). In general, the goal is to take a 25–50-g sample and reduce its volume to less than 1 ml, with high recovery of viable target bacteria and full removal of matrix-associated inhibitory compounds. During these procedures, attractive forces between bacterial cells and matrix components are disrupted and 344 Y ASM News / Volume 69, Number 7, 2003 blocked from recurring, preferably without killing the bacteria. Enzymes, detergents, and changes in pH or ionic conditions provide ways to dissociate bacteria from such matrices, albeit with mixed success. Centrifugation is a commonly used physical method to separate and concentrate microorganisms from complex sample matrices. Often, samples are centrifuged at low speeds to sediment food particulates, leaving bacterial cells in the supernatant fluid. Alternatively, samples are centrifuged at higher forces to sediment bacterial cells, although other particles of equal or greater density will sediment as well. Differential and density gradient centrifugation methods also may be used to separate bacteria from complex food matrices such as meats. Centrifugation efficiencies can be improved if particle diameters are increased. One way involves removing electrostatic charges (typically by changing pH) to allow particles to adhere and thus coagulate. Alternatively, adding small amounts of high-molecular-weight, charged materials that bridge oppositely charged particles enables loose aggregates to form, or FIGURE 3 flocculate, and these may be readily removed by centrifugation. Filtration is another important tool for concentrating bacteria. Filtering through cheesecloth, filter paper, or a similar material can remove solid food particles from samples, while the bacteria are retained in the filtrates. Alternatively, a food product homogenate can be passed through a filter designed to retain the microorganisms based on their size and chemical properties with subsequent disposal of the filtrate. Filter type, pore shape and dimension, and the physical and chemical properties of the microorganisms all contribute to recovery efficiencies. Bacteria also may be immobilized using various materials, including ion exchange resins, lectins, and metal hydroxides. Some of these agents, such as metal hydroxides, can be used in floc form, while others are adsorbed to beads or affinity columns. After the bacteria within a food sample become Schematic of the concept and power of bacterial concentration prior to the application of attached to a solid support and are subreal-time detection. sequently separated from the food matrice, they are desorbed and then concentrated. Enzymes or changes in pH or ionic When considered together, many of the bacstrength may be used to desorb bacteria from terial concentration methods are complex, expensive, and can be applied only to relatively these immobilizing materials, with various delow-volume samples. Another common theme is grees of efficiency. the need for initially treating samples to desorb Immunomagnetic separation (IMS) is curbacteria from food matrices. Although achievrently a widely used biologically based bacterial ing a 50- to 100-fold sample concentration with concentration technique. IMS combines the use recovery of 100% of the microorganisms and of monoclonal antibodies with magnetic spheres complete removal of all matrix-related inhibito select target cells from a mixed population. tory compounds is desirable, this goal is difficult After allowing the antibody to bind target bacto achieve with current technologies. terial antigens within a food matrix, target cells are separated from mixtures by exposing them to a magnetic field. For instance, monosized Additional Sample Concentration through superparamagnetic polymer particles, known as Nucleic Acid Extraction ™ Dynabeads , are available from Dynal Biotech Effective nucleic acid extraction methods can of Oslo, Norway (http://www.dynal.no). IMS further reduce sample volumes and remove mahas proved an effective tool for isolating several trix-associated inhibitors. Although nucleic acid foodborne pathogens, including Listeria monoextraction kits have become commercially availcytogenes, Escherichia coli O157:H7, and Salable during the last five years, many are made monella species. However, even when IMS prefor use on relatively uniform clinical samples. cedes nucleic acid amplification steps, detection 3 These nucleic acid extraction methods typilimits are rarely better than 10 CFU/ml of the cally begin with either enzyme lysis or cell solutarget bacteria in a food homogenate, meaning blization using guanidinium isothiocyanate, folculture enrichment is still often required. Volume 69, Number 7, 2003 / ASM News Y 345 lowed by cleanup steps using organic solvents, suspended silica, affinity purification columns, or proprietary compounds. Each additional step adds time and complexity to the assay, and usually reduces nucleic acid yield. A further consideration is that many of these kits, even those marketed for environmental matrices such as soil, are designed for samples of only 0.1–1.0 g. This means that pathogens will need to be concentrated prior to nucleic acid extraction for those samples containing relatively small numbers of target pathogens. Nonetheless, a good nucleic acid extraction step can reduce inhibitory substances and further reduce sample volumes 10- to 100-fold. If preceded by a pathogen concentration step, a combined concentration factor of 100-fold or more means that a 25-g sample can be reduced to 250 l or less, a volume that is more suitable for typical molecular detection approaches (Fig. 3). Residual Matrix-Associated Amplification Inhibitors Even with the best concentration and purification schemes, residual matrix-associated inhibitors typically remain in final extracts. These inhibitors either prevent amplification, resulting in false-negative results, or else reduce its efficiency, resulting in poor detection limits. These inhibitory effects sometimes are more pronounced when target template levels are particularly low, which is precisely when one needs higher amplification efficiencies. The list of potential matrix-associated inhibitors is nearly endless; few are well characterized, and others remain unidentified. Usage of efficient and more robust enzymes helps to overcome some problems with inhibitors. Also, some investigators add enhancement agents to increase amplification efficiencies in the presence of matrix-associated inhibitors. For instance, bovine serum albumin (BSA) is particularly effective in enhancing the efficiency of DNA amplification from extracts with iron-containing molecules such as hemoglobin or humic acids, which typically are found in meat-containing foods and environmental water samples, respectively. BSA presumably scavenges these inhibitory compounds, preventing them from binding to and inactivating Taq DNA polymerase. Dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), dithiothreitol 346 Y ASM News / Volume 69, Number 7, 2003 (DTT), and betaine are among other commonly used enhancement agents. Choosing the Appropriate Amplification Target Nucleic acid amplification assays fail to differentiate live from dead cells. Culture enrichments prior to PCR do not fully overcome this problem because nucleic acids from dead pathogens may be detected even after such enrichments. Although some researchers suggest that 16S ribosomal RNA would be a good alternative amplification target, this molecule is also relatively stable and therefore not a completely reliable indicator of cell viability. Messenger RNA is considered a more promising target for amplification. However, to be a reliable indicator of viability, the target mRNA should be species or strain specific, have a brief half-life, and be constitutively expressed, preferably at high copy number. Meeting all three of these criteria is a challenge and, although some studies are promising, target choice remains an important consideration. For instance, investigators report 1,000-fold differences in assay sensitivity when using different mRNA targets, and transcription levels for one specific target can change with cell physiological state. Also problematic is the fact that very little work has been done to adapt these RNA-based amplification methods to detecting pathogens in food and environmental matrices. Feasibility of Real-Time and Endpoint Detection Approaches Proponents of real-time nucleic acid amplifications cite two major advantages to this approach: an ability to detect products as they are being amplified and the potential to design quantitative assays. Although both prospects appeal to food and environmental microbiologists, many food safety regulations stipulate detecting either the presence or absence of particular pathogens and are based on zero-tolerance standards. These rules appear unlikely to change in the near future. Also, although detecting a signal while a particular nucleic acid is being amplified may speed up an assay by an hour or so, real-time detection might be less important than endpoint detection in which the specific products are detected immediately following the termination of their amplification. Even so, for some pathogens, quantitative real-time assays may be applicable in the future. For instance, having semiquantitative assays for pathogens such as Vibrio vulnificus and Vibrio parahaemolyticus could improve the management of shellfish-harvesting waters, thus protecting public health while helping the seafood industry. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) standards specify that V. parahaemolyticus levels remain below 10,000 CFU/g in readyto-eat seafoods. This microorganism can be detected directly in oyster mantle fluids (shell liquor) at a limit of 400 CFU/ml using real-time PCR, according to Andy DePaola of the FDA Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory, Dauphin Island, Ala. Moreover, with further concentration and DNA purification, this detection sensitivity may be increased by 10- to 100-fold with relative ease. Nonetheless, there are difficult issues to address before the food industry adopts this technology for routine uses. First, this industry traditionally insisted on culturing microorganisms to identify them and, thus, is wary of the reliability of molecular techniques. Second, the cost of reagents used in real-time assays is high (sometimes over $25 per test), while the instruments cost from $30,000 to $50,000. These costs are prohibitive for all but the largest companies. Finally, the industry is not equipped to hire staff that is trained to do such testing. The methods simply have to become less expensive, more user-friendly, and more robust. Applications to Bioterrorism, Other Considerations In facing bioterrorism threats, food microbiologists are seeking to improve their ability to identify microbial agents in foods as quickly as possible. Much like natural microbial contaminants, such agents could be widely dispersed among different foods in low concentrations, posing the same needle-in-a-haystack challenges that are faced when dealing with other food and environmental samples. Efforts to harness realtime detection strategies and couple them with microarray or DNA chip technologies could help to meet these challenges. Meanwhile, further research is critical. Specifically, research is needed to identify, develop, and refine prototype methods for evaluating the microbiological safety of foods, water, and the environment (Table 2). These methods should concentrate pathogens and remove matrix-associated inhibitors, and should be universal, simple, rapid, and inexpensive. They would thus eliminate or reduce the need for culture enrichments, yielding analyses in less than one day and, preferably, faster. They should also minimize the chance for false-positive results and be available on a commercial and fully certified basis. Meeting these goals will require extensive comparative studies between these new technologies and current standard culture methods. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This article is based on a talk presented at the 102nd ASM annual meeting. I thank Andy DePaola of the FDA Gulf Coast Seafood Laboratory for the figure for real-time detection of V. parahaemolyticus using the TaqMan® assay (Fig. 1B) and John McKillip of Louisiana Tech University, Ruston, for the figure for real-time detection of Bacillus cereus using NASBA/ molecular beacons (Fig. 1C). I also acknowledge Christina Moore, who prepared Fig. 1 and 2, and the USDA-CSREES National Research Initiative for financial support. This work represents paper number FSR 03-13 of the Journal Series of the Department of Food Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh NC 27695–7624. The mention of trademarked products in this paper does not imply any endorsement by the North Carolina Agricultural Research Service or criticism of similar products that were not mentioned. SUGGESTED READING Enserink, M. 2001. News focus: biodefense hampered by inadequate tests. Science 294:1266 –1267. Lantz, P. G., W. Abu al-Soud, R. Knutsson, B. Hahn-Hagerdal, and P. Radstrom. 2000. Biotechnical use of polymerase chain reaction for microbiological analysis of biological samples. Biotechnol. Ann. Rev. 5:87–130. Payne, M. J., and R. G. Kroll. 1991. Methods for the separation and concentration of bacteria from foods. Trends Food Sci. Technol. 2:315–319. Sharpe, A. N. 1997. Separation and concentration of pathogens from foods, p. 27– 44. In M. L. Tortorello and S. M. Gendel (ed.), Food microbiological analysis: new technologies. Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York. Wilson, I. G. 1997. Inhibition and facilitation of nucleic acid amplification. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 63:3741–3751. 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