UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Certain strains of bacteria can withstand heat treatments such as pasteurization of milk and possess the potential to induce foodborne illness. To help minimize and predict the magnitude of this risk, a team led by Penn State researchers developed a model that can guide processors to improve food safety.
In findings published this week (June 6) in the Journal of Dairy Science, the researchers described their model that assesses high-temperature, short-time pasteurized milk — the most common method of pasteurization in the United States today — and how it might expose consumers to pathogenic Bacillus cereus group organisms, which include eight species of bacteria.
“The Bacillus cereus group is a diverse group of microorganisms in terms of their implications on food spoilage and safety,” said team leader Jasna Kovac, Lester Earl and Veronica Casida Career Development Professor of Food Safety in the College of Agricultural Sciences at Penn State. “The novelty of our study is in generating experimental growth data and models for different genotypes, or genetic make-ups, of toxin-producing B. cereus group strains. Our approach to elucidate differences in the growth potential of various genotypes in milk allowed us to develop a more accurate exposure-assessment model.”
The model can inform food safety decision-making in industries that test milk, according to Kovac. Processors test the milk to determine which strains of Bacillus cereus group bacteria and how much may contaminate the product. They can feed that information into the model to predict if a contaminant is likely going to grow to a high level in a large proportion of produced food units, resulting in high-risk exposure of many customers.
Foods contaminated with 100,000 cells per milliliter of Bacillus cereus group microorganisms have been linked to foodborne illness, Kovac noted. In the model developed in this study, some genotypes were predicted to grow to 100,000 cells per milliliter of milk, but the concentration per simulated milk container could vary from very low levels of bacteria to 10 times more.
“This is significant because this difference in exposure can be translated to different levels of risk for foodborne illness,” she said.
In the study, researchers measured the growth, in skim milk, of 17 toxin-producing Bacillus cereus strains across the gene profiles of six related bacteria groups with various virulence, or ability to cause disease. The strains did not grow in high-temperature, short-time pasteurized milk at 39 degrees Fahrenheit or 43 F; at 46 F, one strain grew; at 50 F, 15 strains grew; and all strains grew at temperatures 57 F or above.