A specific real-time PCR quantification method combined with a propidium monoazide sample treatment step was developed to determine quantitatively the viable population of the Photobacterium phosphoreum species group in raw modified-atmospherepacked salmon. Primers were designed to amplify a 350-bp fragment of the gyrase subunit B gene (gyrB) of P. phosphoreum. The specificity of the two primers was demonstrated by using purified DNA from 81 strains of 52 different bacterial species. When these primers were used for real-time PCR in pure culture, a good correlation (R 2 of 0.99) was obtained between this method and conventional enumeration on marine agar (MA). Quantification was linear over 5 log units as confirmed by using inoculated salmon samples. On naturally contaminated fresh salmon, the new real-time PCR method performed successfully with a quantification limit of 3 log CFU/g. A correlation coefficient (R 2 ) of 0.963 was obtained between the PCR method and classic enumeration on MA, followed by identification of colonies (290 isolates identified by real-time PCR or by 16S rRNA gene sequencing). A good correlation with an R 2 of 0.940 was found between the new PCR method and an available specific conductance method for P. phosphoreum. This study presents a rapid tool for producing reliable quantitative data on viable P. phosphoreum bacteria in fresh salmon in 6 h. This new culture-independent method will be valuable for future fish inspection, the assessment of raw material quality in fish processing plants, and studies on the ecology of this important specific spoilage microorganism.
Modified-atmosphere-packed (MAP) fresh fish is increasingly popular in Europe and widely sold in supermarkets as a chilled product. Compared to aerobically stored fresh fish, this kind of packaging, with typical headspace CO 2 concentrations of 20 to 60%, modifies the dominating microbiota mainly by reducing growth of aerobic Gram-negative bacteria like Pseudomonas (1, 2). This results in an extended shelf life which facilitates the chilled distribution and marketing of fresh MAP fish. However, this packaging allows the growth of CO 2 -resistant bacteria, including Gram-positive lactic acid bacteria and the Gram-negative bacterium Photobacterium phosphoreum (2-4). The latter has been identified as the specific spoilage organism (SSO) responsible for trimethylamine production and sensory spoilage of MAP cod (5, 6) and as the main spoilage bacterial species of several chilled marine fish, including cod, garfish, halibut, saithe, salmon, and shrimp (7-15).Multilocus analysis, based on 16S rRNA and gyrB and luxABFE genes, divided strains originally isolated and identified as P. phosphoreum into three distinct clades of P. phosphoreum, Photobacterium iliopiscarium, and Photobacterium kishitanii (16,17). The members of the P. phosphoreum species group have been reported as important for spoilage of raw MAP fish, and they include both luminous and nonluminous variants (5, 18). It is therefore relevant to detect and enumerate this s...