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MOLECULAR DETECTION TECHNIQUES IN
FOOD QUALITY CONTROL: AN OVERVIEW




             By: Yakindra Prasad Timilsena
             ID- 111332
BACKGROUND
 FoodQuality control is the multidisciplinary
 approaches of maintaining physical, chemical,
 microbiological, technological and sensory
 wholesomeness in foods

 Method   of detection of food adulteration is the
  core of food quality control program.
 Traceability and quality assurance in the food and
  feed industry through detection technique at every
  step of the manufacturing chain 'from farm to fork’
  are essential for regulatory agencies.
PROBLEM     STATEMENT

 Chemistry   alone can’t solve all the problems of
  detection
 Chemical methods of analysis are time consuming
  and costly. Need of rapid and reliable methods
 Methods based on molecular biology and
  immunology approaches- better alternatives
 Knowledge on molecular organization of the cell
  has led to the development of powerful new
  techniques that bring greater accuracy, rapid, cost
  effective
 Molecular methods-more superior than
  immunological methods.
COMMON MOLECULAR          METHODS



 PCR  (RT-PCR, Multiplex), RFLP, SSCP and
  sequencing
 Plasmid profiling, ribotyping, macrorestriction
  analysis by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)
 Newer techniques which use fluorescent dyes, DNA
  microarrays, protein chemistry and mass
  spectrometry.
 DNA chip, the GeneChip,
COMMON MOLECULAR TECHNIQUES
  Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Analysis
   (RAPD)
  Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP)
  Loop Mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP)

    Biosensors
         Gold Nanoparticle-based Biosensor
         Fiber Optic Biosensor
         Electrochemical Biosensor

 Although there are many nucleic acid molecular
 detection methods, only DNA probe and PCR has been
 developed commercially for detection of food
 pathogens.
APPLICATIONS           OF MOLECULAR METHOD

 Detecting   and identifying specific genes (GM foods)

 Application   to Food Authenticity and Legislation

 Detection   of microbial contamination of foods
 Species Identification
 Detection of Food Constituents (Ingredients or
  Contaminants)
 Detection of antibiotics, pesticides residues etc.

 Halal   and Kosher certification
What is PCR?
DNA replication in a tube (in vitro). Xeroxing (copying) of DNA.

The Components of PCR
The basic components of a PCR reaction are
    - one or more molecules of target DNA
    - two oligonucleotide primers
    - thermostable DNA polymerase
    - dNTPs

The Process of PCR
Each PCR cycle requires three temperature steps to complete a round of DNA
synthesis:
MINIMUM CRITERIA FOR PCR

 The  sample must contain at least one intact
  DNA strand comprising the region to be
  amplified
 impurities must be sufficiently diluted so as
  not to inhibit the polymerization step of the
  PCR reaction.

DNA samples for PCR, regardless of preparation method, are
generally run in duplicate in order to provide a control for the
relative quality and purity of the original sample.
PCR     STEPS

   isolation of DNA from the food (CTAB method is common)

          amplification of the target sequences by PCR

     separation of the amplification products by agarose gel
                         electrophoresis

   estimation of their fragment size by comparison with a DNA
   molecular mass marker after staining with ethidium bromide

     verification of the PCR results by specific cleavage of the
  amplification products by restriction endonuclease, transfer of
separated amplification products onto membranes (Southern Blot)
followed by hybridisation with a DNA probe specific for the target
                             sequence
Gel electrophoresis for detecting PCR products
 Agarose Gels:
    • NuSieve  agarose separates short products better
     than the regular agarose. More expensive but use
     less for the same gel strength as regular agarose.

 Real Time detection of PCR products
   • No gels required. Recent method. Relies on the
     ability of a dye, SYBR Green, to interact with
     double stranded amplicons produced during PCR,
     to produce fluorescence which is detected in a
     flurometer.
MULTIPLEX PCR


 Several primers pairs with similar annealing
  requirements can be added to a PCR mixture to
  simultaneously detect several target sequences
 saves time and minimize the expense on
  detection of food borne pathogens
 primers shoud have same melting temperature

 must not interact with each other.

 the amplified fragments of same length cannot be
  detected
MULTIPLEX PCR

 Standard  PCR- unable to differentiate viable and
  non-viable microorganisms
 Ethidium monoazide can be used to separate dead
  and viable bacteria
 Real-time PCR using RNA as template is more
  authentic since the RNA is present only in viable
  microbes.
 RNA is first reverse transcribed to cDNA and then
  used for amplification.
POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION – RESTRICTION
        FRAGMENT LENGTH POLYMORPHISM
                    (PCR-RFLP)

 The  method includes amplification of a known DNA
  sequence using two specific primers, subsequent
  digestion of an amplicon with restriction
  endonucleases and separation and comparison of
  DNA restriction fragments.
 The disadvantage of RFLP analysis of PCR product
  is that incomplete digestion may occasionally occur
  and intra-specific variation could delete or create
  additional restriction sites (Lockley and Bardsley,
  2000).
RAPD-PCR
 Random   amplified polymorphic DNA PCR
  uses a random primer (10-mer) to generate
  a DNA profile.
 The primer anneals to several places on the
  DNA template and generate a DNA profile
  which is used for microbe identification.
 RAPD has many advantages:
  Pure DNA is not needed
  Less labor intensive than RFLP.
  There is no need for prior DNA sequence   data.
 RAPD has been used to fingerprint the
 outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes from milk.
RIBOTYPING

 Ribotyping   is a method that can identify and
  classify bacteria based upon differences in rRNA. It
  generates a highly reproducible and precise
  fingerprint that can be used to classify bacteria
  from the genus through and beyond the species
  level.
 Databases for Listeria (80 pattern types),
  Salmonella (97 pattern types), Escherichia (65
  pattern types) and Staphylococcus(252 pattern
  types) have been established.
PLASMID PROFILING

 Plasmid   profile analysis involves extraction of
  plasmid DNA and separation by electrophoresis.
  The plasmids are visualized under UV light and
  sized in relation to plasmids of known molecular
  mass carried in a reference strain of E. coli.
 Plasmid analysis of over 120 strains of Cl.
  perfringens, isolated during food-poisoning
  incidents was carried out by Jones et al., 1989.
 A high proportion (71%) of fresh and well-
  characterized food-poisoning strains possessed
  plasmids of 6.2 kb in size (compared with 19% of
  non-food-poisoning strains).
LAB-ON-A-CHIP        TECHNOLOGY

 An  alternative approach for the visualization of the
  PCR products by the CE on a card-sized device.
 Can be used to replace the gel-electrophoretic
  step in the PCR end-point detection,
 DNA fragments were detected using laser-
  induced fluorescence, which enables accurate
  sizing and quantification of DNA fragments.
 Higher speed, simplicity and safety.

 This approach allowed identification of 5% fish
  species admixed into a product containing two
  fish species.
DIRECT EPIFLOURESCENT TECHNIQUE
(DEFT)
 Direct method used for enumeration of microbe based on
  binding properties of flurochrome acridine orange dye.
 Food samples are pretreated with detergents and proteolytic
  enzymes, filtered on to a polycarbonate membrane stained
  with acridine orange and examined under fluorescent
  microscope




                       Streptococcus and
                        Staphylococcus can be detectedd
                        by this method
                   Fig. Staphylococcus aureus - Acridine-
                   orange leucocyte cytospin test
ELECTROPHORETIC           METHODS

 Electrophoretic   methods are based on the ability of
 molecules to migrate according to their molecular weight
 (Mw) in the electric field due to the effect of electrostatic
 forces attracting them to reversely charged electrode.

 The   migration is performed on agarose or
 polyacrylamide gel. Various modifications of
 electrophoretic methods are used depending on a type
 of the analysed product:
ELECTROPHORETIC           METHODS

 isoelectric   focusing (IEF)

 urea   isoelectric focusing (urea-IEF)

 sodium   dodecyl sulphate – polyacrylamide gel
 electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)

 two   dimensional electrophoresis (2DE)

 capillary   electrophoresis (CE)
GM-PLANTS AND DERIVED FOODS DETECTION
                 PROCEDURE
                         Samples
                                   Sampling



            Tested Samples          Saved Samples


     Protein Detection               Nucleic Acids
         Methods                   Detection Methods


                                     DNA Extraction
    ELISA     Lateral Flow Strip



                                    Conventional PCR

            Negative               Positive
              No GM contents           Contained
                                      GM contents


                                    Quantitative PCR



                                   GM Contents (xx%)
GM-PLANTS AND DERIVED FOODS DETECTION
                      PROCEDURE

 Commercial GMO contain the 35S promoter of Cauliflower
  Mosaic Virus and/or the NOS terminator of Agrobacterium,
  these genetic elements are used as target sequences for a
  general screening
 Since primer selection has to be based on target
  sequences that are characteristic for the individual
  transgenic organism. Therefore, a prerequisite for
  designing specific primers for the identification of GMOs by
  PCR is the availability of detailed information on their
  molecular make-up.
 Molecular make-up of non-authorized GMOs is generally
  not available and so impossible to detect the presence of
  non-authorized GMOs.
DETECTION      OF   FOOD-BORNE PATHOGENS
A  short cultural enrichment followed by physical
 separation of the organisms from the culture medium
 is required for food samples prior to analysis.
 Enrichment prior to DNA extraction and PCR analysis
 results in a dilution of PCR inhibitors and an increased
 number of target cells and therefore in a higher
 sensitivity. Only viable cells are detected.

 RNA based methods more preferred since mRNAs are
 short living molecules and can be amplified in the PCR
 system only in case of viable cells. Cultural
 enrichment step is not required.
DETECTION    OF   FOOD-BORNE PATHOGENS
 In a study the development of a PCR-based technique
  for the rapid identification of the food-borne pathogens
  Salmonella and Escherichia coli was undertaken.
  Suitable primers were designed based on specific gene
  fimA of Salmonella and gene afa of pathogenic E. coli
  for amplification.
 Agarose gel electrophoresis and subsequent staining
  with ethidium bromide were used for the identification of
  PCR products. The size of the amplified product was
  120 bp as shown by comparison with marker DNA.
  These studies have established that fimA and afa
  primers were specific for detecting Salmonella and
  pathogenic E. coli, respectively, in the food samples
  (Naravaneni & Jamil, 2005)
DNA MICROARRAY
 DNA microarray (DNA chip) is rapid and provides
  simultaneous DNA screening of hundreds of species at
  once.
 The chip is a glass or nylon membrane with spots of
  probes oligonucleotides that are complementary to the
  specific target DNA sequence. The targets hybridize with
  the captured oligonucleotides on the chip and the
  fluorescent label, which is attached to the target during the
  PCR, is detected.
 The oligonucleotide microarray analysis of the PCR
  product from the mt cyt b gene was applied to identify
  different animal species in food samples (Peter et al.,
  2004).
BIOSENSOR




Majority of the Biosensors are based on immunological methods,
Ritcher 1993
IMPEDANCE-BASED           BIOCHIP SENSOR

  Based   on the changes in conductance in a medium
   due to microbial breakdown of inert substances into
   electrically charged ionic compounds.
  Allows the detection of only the viable cells


         PIEZOELECTRIC          BIOSENSOR
 Very attractive and offers real time output, simplicity of
  use and cost effectiveness
 Based on coating the surface of piezoelectric sensor with
  a selective binding substance e.g. antibodies, placing it in
  a solution containing bacteria, the bacteria/antigen will
  bind to the antibodies and the mass of the crystal
  increase while the resonance frequency will decrease
FOURIER   TRANSFORM INFRARED   (FT-IR)   SPECTROSCOPY TECHNIQUES

 FT-IR spectroscopy enables rapid and non-invasive
  characterization of molecular structures in a sample
 Can be used to provide compositional and quantitative
  information.
 Can be used for discriminating and classifying intact microbial
  cells down to the strain level in pure culture
 With help of chemometric there has been improvement in the
  sensitivity of FT-IR to identify, discriminate, and quantify
  bacteria
 Peaks in bacterial spectra are assigned to specific chemical
  bonds, which may be correlated to bacterial concentrations
 Spectral libraries may be created for bacteria in foods and
  based on comparison between spectra of artificially
  contaminated samples with these libraries; the extent of
  contamination may be quantifiable.
DETECTION OF VIRUSES IN FOODS

Virus has been identified in food by Ligase
Chain Reaction (LCR) Nucleic Acid Sequence
                     ,



Based Amplification (NASBA), Self sustaining
sequence replication (3SR), Strand Displacement
Amplification (SDA), situ hybridization (FISH),
development of gene probes and PCR
amplification techniques are used to detect the
virus in food samples
FLUORESCENT IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION (FISH)
A  molecular technique often used to identify and
  enumerate specific microbial groups.
 The FISH technique is dependent upon hybridizing
  a probe with a fluorescent tag, complementary in
  sequence, to a short section of DNA on a target
  gene.
 The tag and probe are applied to a sample of
  interest under conditions that allow for the probe to
  attach itself to the complementary sequence in the
  specimen
 After sample treatment, excess fluorophore is
  washed away and the sample can be visualized
  under a fluorescent microscope.
FLUORESCENT IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION (FISH)
REFERENCES
   Mandal, P.K., A.K. Biswas, K. Choi and U.K. Pal,
    2011. Methods of Rapid Detection of Foodborne
    Pathogens: An Overview. Am. J. Food Tech. 6(2):
    87-102
   http://www.fda.gov/food/scienceresearch/Laboratory
    methods/bacteriologicalanalyticalmanualbam/ucm1096
    52.htm#ref4

   http://www.worldfoodscience.org/cms/

 Naravaneni      R, Jamil K. J Med Microbiol. 2005
    Jan;54(Pt 1):51-4
The Karnali Bridge, Near My Home Town




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Molecular detection of food borne pathogens-presentation

  • 1. MOLECULAR DETECTION TECHNIQUES IN FOOD QUALITY CONTROL: AN OVERVIEW By: Yakindra Prasad Timilsena ID- 111332
  • 2. BACKGROUND  FoodQuality control is the multidisciplinary approaches of maintaining physical, chemical, microbiological, technological and sensory wholesomeness in foods  Method of detection of food adulteration is the core of food quality control program.  Traceability and quality assurance in the food and feed industry through detection technique at every step of the manufacturing chain 'from farm to fork’ are essential for regulatory agencies.
  • 3. PROBLEM STATEMENT  Chemistry alone can’t solve all the problems of detection  Chemical methods of analysis are time consuming and costly. Need of rapid and reliable methods  Methods based on molecular biology and immunology approaches- better alternatives  Knowledge on molecular organization of the cell has led to the development of powerful new techniques that bring greater accuracy, rapid, cost effective  Molecular methods-more superior than immunological methods.
  • 4. COMMON MOLECULAR METHODS  PCR (RT-PCR, Multiplex), RFLP, SSCP and sequencing  Plasmid profiling, ribotyping, macrorestriction analysis by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE)  Newer techniques which use fluorescent dyes, DNA microarrays, protein chemistry and mass spectrometry.  DNA chip, the GeneChip,
  • 5. COMMON MOLECULAR TECHNIQUES  Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA Analysis (RAPD)  Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP)  Loop Mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP)  Biosensors  Gold Nanoparticle-based Biosensor  Fiber Optic Biosensor  Electrochemical Biosensor  Although there are many nucleic acid molecular detection methods, only DNA probe and PCR has been developed commercially for detection of food pathogens.
  • 6. APPLICATIONS OF MOLECULAR METHOD  Detecting and identifying specific genes (GM foods)  Application to Food Authenticity and Legislation  Detection of microbial contamination of foods  Species Identification  Detection of Food Constituents (Ingredients or Contaminants)  Detection of antibiotics, pesticides residues etc.  Halal and Kosher certification
  • 7. What is PCR? DNA replication in a tube (in vitro). Xeroxing (copying) of DNA. The Components of PCR The basic components of a PCR reaction are - one or more molecules of target DNA - two oligonucleotide primers - thermostable DNA polymerase - dNTPs The Process of PCR Each PCR cycle requires three temperature steps to complete a round of DNA synthesis:
  • 8. MINIMUM CRITERIA FOR PCR  The sample must contain at least one intact DNA strand comprising the region to be amplified  impurities must be sufficiently diluted so as not to inhibit the polymerization step of the PCR reaction. DNA samples for PCR, regardless of preparation method, are generally run in duplicate in order to provide a control for the relative quality and purity of the original sample.
  • 9. PCR STEPS isolation of DNA from the food (CTAB method is common) amplification of the target sequences by PCR separation of the amplification products by agarose gel electrophoresis estimation of their fragment size by comparison with a DNA molecular mass marker after staining with ethidium bromide verification of the PCR results by specific cleavage of the amplification products by restriction endonuclease, transfer of separated amplification products onto membranes (Southern Blot) followed by hybridisation with a DNA probe specific for the target sequence
  • 10. Gel electrophoresis for detecting PCR products Agarose Gels: • NuSieve agarose separates short products better than the regular agarose. More expensive but use less for the same gel strength as regular agarose. Real Time detection of PCR products • No gels required. Recent method. Relies on the ability of a dye, SYBR Green, to interact with double stranded amplicons produced during PCR, to produce fluorescence which is detected in a flurometer.
  • 11. MULTIPLEX PCR  Several primers pairs with similar annealing requirements can be added to a PCR mixture to simultaneously detect several target sequences  saves time and minimize the expense on detection of food borne pathogens  primers shoud have same melting temperature  must not interact with each other.  the amplified fragments of same length cannot be detected
  • 12. MULTIPLEX PCR  Standard PCR- unable to differentiate viable and non-viable microorganisms  Ethidium monoazide can be used to separate dead and viable bacteria  Real-time PCR using RNA as template is more authentic since the RNA is present only in viable microbes.  RNA is first reverse transcribed to cDNA and then used for amplification.
  • 13. POLYMERASE CHAIN REACTION – RESTRICTION FRAGMENT LENGTH POLYMORPHISM (PCR-RFLP)  The method includes amplification of a known DNA sequence using two specific primers, subsequent digestion of an amplicon with restriction endonucleases and separation and comparison of DNA restriction fragments.  The disadvantage of RFLP analysis of PCR product is that incomplete digestion may occasionally occur and intra-specific variation could delete or create additional restriction sites (Lockley and Bardsley, 2000).
  • 14. RAPD-PCR  Random amplified polymorphic DNA PCR uses a random primer (10-mer) to generate a DNA profile.  The primer anneals to several places on the DNA template and generate a DNA profile which is used for microbe identification.  RAPD has many advantages:  Pure DNA is not needed  Less labor intensive than RFLP.  There is no need for prior DNA sequence data.  RAPD has been used to fingerprint the outbreak of Listeria monocytogenes from milk.
  • 15. RIBOTYPING  Ribotyping is a method that can identify and classify bacteria based upon differences in rRNA. It generates a highly reproducible and precise fingerprint that can be used to classify bacteria from the genus through and beyond the species level.  Databases for Listeria (80 pattern types), Salmonella (97 pattern types), Escherichia (65 pattern types) and Staphylococcus(252 pattern types) have been established.
  • 16. PLASMID PROFILING  Plasmid profile analysis involves extraction of plasmid DNA and separation by electrophoresis. The plasmids are visualized under UV light and sized in relation to plasmids of known molecular mass carried in a reference strain of E. coli.  Plasmid analysis of over 120 strains of Cl. perfringens, isolated during food-poisoning incidents was carried out by Jones et al., 1989.  A high proportion (71%) of fresh and well- characterized food-poisoning strains possessed plasmids of 6.2 kb in size (compared with 19% of non-food-poisoning strains).
  • 17. LAB-ON-A-CHIP TECHNOLOGY  An alternative approach for the visualization of the PCR products by the CE on a card-sized device.  Can be used to replace the gel-electrophoretic step in the PCR end-point detection,  DNA fragments were detected using laser- induced fluorescence, which enables accurate sizing and quantification of DNA fragments.  Higher speed, simplicity and safety.  This approach allowed identification of 5% fish species admixed into a product containing two fish species.
  • 18. DIRECT EPIFLOURESCENT TECHNIQUE (DEFT)  Direct method used for enumeration of microbe based on binding properties of flurochrome acridine orange dye.  Food samples are pretreated with detergents and proteolytic enzymes, filtered on to a polycarbonate membrane stained with acridine orange and examined under fluorescent microscope  Streptococcus and Staphylococcus can be detectedd by this method Fig. Staphylococcus aureus - Acridine- orange leucocyte cytospin test
  • 19. ELECTROPHORETIC METHODS  Electrophoretic methods are based on the ability of molecules to migrate according to their molecular weight (Mw) in the electric field due to the effect of electrostatic forces attracting them to reversely charged electrode.  The migration is performed on agarose or polyacrylamide gel. Various modifications of electrophoretic methods are used depending on a type of the analysed product:
  • 20. ELECTROPHORETIC METHODS  isoelectric focusing (IEF)  urea isoelectric focusing (urea-IEF)  sodium dodecyl sulphate – polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)  two dimensional electrophoresis (2DE)  capillary electrophoresis (CE)
  • 21. GM-PLANTS AND DERIVED FOODS DETECTION PROCEDURE Samples Sampling Tested Samples Saved Samples Protein Detection Nucleic Acids Methods Detection Methods DNA Extraction ELISA Lateral Flow Strip Conventional PCR Negative Positive No GM contents Contained GM contents Quantitative PCR GM Contents (xx%)
  • 22. GM-PLANTS AND DERIVED FOODS DETECTION PROCEDURE  Commercial GMO contain the 35S promoter of Cauliflower Mosaic Virus and/or the NOS terminator of Agrobacterium, these genetic elements are used as target sequences for a general screening  Since primer selection has to be based on target sequences that are characteristic for the individual transgenic organism. Therefore, a prerequisite for designing specific primers for the identification of GMOs by PCR is the availability of detailed information on their molecular make-up.  Molecular make-up of non-authorized GMOs is generally not available and so impossible to detect the presence of non-authorized GMOs.
  • 23. DETECTION OF FOOD-BORNE PATHOGENS A short cultural enrichment followed by physical separation of the organisms from the culture medium is required for food samples prior to analysis. Enrichment prior to DNA extraction and PCR analysis results in a dilution of PCR inhibitors and an increased number of target cells and therefore in a higher sensitivity. Only viable cells are detected.  RNA based methods more preferred since mRNAs are short living molecules and can be amplified in the PCR system only in case of viable cells. Cultural enrichment step is not required.
  • 24. DETECTION OF FOOD-BORNE PATHOGENS  In a study the development of a PCR-based technique for the rapid identification of the food-borne pathogens Salmonella and Escherichia coli was undertaken. Suitable primers were designed based on specific gene fimA of Salmonella and gene afa of pathogenic E. coli for amplification.  Agarose gel electrophoresis and subsequent staining with ethidium bromide were used for the identification of PCR products. The size of the amplified product was 120 bp as shown by comparison with marker DNA. These studies have established that fimA and afa primers were specific for detecting Salmonella and pathogenic E. coli, respectively, in the food samples (Naravaneni & Jamil, 2005)
  • 25. DNA MICROARRAY  DNA microarray (DNA chip) is rapid and provides simultaneous DNA screening of hundreds of species at once.  The chip is a glass or nylon membrane with spots of probes oligonucleotides that are complementary to the specific target DNA sequence. The targets hybridize with the captured oligonucleotides on the chip and the fluorescent label, which is attached to the target during the PCR, is detected.  The oligonucleotide microarray analysis of the PCR product from the mt cyt b gene was applied to identify different animal species in food samples (Peter et al., 2004).
  • 26. BIOSENSOR Majority of the Biosensors are based on immunological methods, Ritcher 1993
  • 27. IMPEDANCE-BASED BIOCHIP SENSOR  Based on the changes in conductance in a medium due to microbial breakdown of inert substances into electrically charged ionic compounds.  Allows the detection of only the viable cells PIEZOELECTRIC BIOSENSOR  Very attractive and offers real time output, simplicity of use and cost effectiveness  Based on coating the surface of piezoelectric sensor with a selective binding substance e.g. antibodies, placing it in a solution containing bacteria, the bacteria/antigen will bind to the antibodies and the mass of the crystal increase while the resonance frequency will decrease
  • 28. FOURIER TRANSFORM INFRARED (FT-IR) SPECTROSCOPY TECHNIQUES  FT-IR spectroscopy enables rapid and non-invasive characterization of molecular structures in a sample  Can be used to provide compositional and quantitative information.  Can be used for discriminating and classifying intact microbial cells down to the strain level in pure culture  With help of chemometric there has been improvement in the sensitivity of FT-IR to identify, discriminate, and quantify bacteria  Peaks in bacterial spectra are assigned to specific chemical bonds, which may be correlated to bacterial concentrations  Spectral libraries may be created for bacteria in foods and based on comparison between spectra of artificially contaminated samples with these libraries; the extent of contamination may be quantifiable.
  • 29. DETECTION OF VIRUSES IN FOODS Virus has been identified in food by Ligase Chain Reaction (LCR) Nucleic Acid Sequence , Based Amplification (NASBA), Self sustaining sequence replication (3SR), Strand Displacement Amplification (SDA), situ hybridization (FISH), development of gene probes and PCR amplification techniques are used to detect the virus in food samples
  • 30. FLUORESCENT IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION (FISH) A molecular technique often used to identify and enumerate specific microbial groups.  The FISH technique is dependent upon hybridizing a probe with a fluorescent tag, complementary in sequence, to a short section of DNA on a target gene.  The tag and probe are applied to a sample of interest under conditions that allow for the probe to attach itself to the complementary sequence in the specimen  After sample treatment, excess fluorophore is washed away and the sample can be visualized under a fluorescent microscope.
  • 31. FLUORESCENT IN SITU HYBRIDIZATION (FISH)
  • 32. REFERENCES  Mandal, P.K., A.K. Biswas, K. Choi and U.K. Pal, 2011. Methods of Rapid Detection of Foodborne Pathogens: An Overview. Am. J. Food Tech. 6(2): 87-102  http://www.fda.gov/food/scienceresearch/Laboratory methods/bacteriologicalanalyticalmanualbam/ucm1096 52.htm#ref4  http://www.worldfoodscience.org/cms/  Naravaneni R, Jamil K. J Med Microbiol. 2005 Jan;54(Pt 1):51-4
  • 33. The Karnali Bridge, Near My Home Town THANK YOU for your kind attention!

Editor's Notes

  1. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP), Ligase Chain Reaction (LCR),Nucleic Acid Sequence Based Amplification (NASBA), Self sustaining sequence replication (3SR), Strand Displacement Amplification (SDA), Single strand confirmation polymorphism (SSCP)