SUMMARYBetween 1969 and 1990 strains ofStaphylococcus aureusfrom 359 outbreaks and sporadic cases of staphylococcal food poisoning in the United Kingdom were examined in the PHLS Food Hygiene Laboratory for the production of enterotoxin. In a number of instances the incriminated foods were also examined for the presence of enterotoxin. Strains from 79% of incidents produced enterotoxin A alone or together with another enterotoxin. The level ofS. aureuspresent in the foods ranged from no viableS. aureusdetected to 1.5 × 1010c.f.u./g with a median of 3.0 × 107c.f.u./g. Enterotoxin was detected in foods in the absence of viableS. aureusin only two outbreaks and in both cheese was the implicated food. Meat. poultry or their products were the vehicle in 75% of incidents with ham and chicken most frequently implicated. Other foods included fish and shellfish (7%) and milk and milk products (8%). Most contamination took place in the home followed by restaurants and shops. Seventy-one percent of the incident strains were lysed by phages of group III or I/III.
The susceptibilities to arsenic and cadmium together with the detection of plasmid DNA were evaluated for use as epidemiological markers for the subtyping of Listeria monocytogenes. Plasmid DNA was detected in 34% of 322 apparently unrelated isolates of L. monocytogenes. The resistance to cadmium and arsenic differentiated 565 apparently unrelated cultures into four groups, the smallest being 5% of cultures resistant to both agents, and the largest (53%) being sensitive to cadmium and resistant to arsenic. The resistance patterns to these agents and the presence of plasmid DNA varied markedly between the serotypes of the cultures. The detection of plasmid DNA was strongly associated with cadmium resistance in serogroup 1/2 cultures, but not within those of serogroup 4. Arsenic resistance was not associated with plasmid DNA. All methods were sufficiently stable to be useful for epidemiological investigations. The techniques described here offer simple methods which can be easily utilized in laboratories without a specialized expertise for this bacterium.
INCORPORATION OF 32p IN THE LEUCOCYTE 487 7. Treatment with leucocidin reduces the amount of [14C]adenine incorporated into adenosine triphosphate and the amount of [14C]acetate incorporated into the lipids of the cell. 8. It is suggested that the stimulation of incorporation of 32p in the leucocidin-treated leucocyte does not result from an increased rate of turnover of any phosphorus compound of the cell but can result from direct utilization at the cell surface of the external orthophosphate.
Enterotoxin production by strains of Staphylococcus aureus isolated from routine samples of foods and from human beings was investigated. Twenty-one to 26% of 112 strains isolated from raw meat, sausages and poultry and 32-36% of 183 strains isolated from cooked foods, e.g. meat, chicken and frozen seafoods, produced enterotoxins A, B, C, D or E. Staph. aureus isolated from raw meat and chicken less frequently produced enterotoxins A, B, C or E and more frequently enterotoxin D, than those from cooked meat and seafoods. Of the 113 strains isolated from cheese and raw milk 6-11% produced enterotoxin and most of these produced enterotoxin D. Only a few strains isolated from foods produced enterotoxin E. Results of enterotoxin tests on Staph. aureus from human beings resembled those on strains from cooked foods.
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