Occurrence and molecular characterization of Salmonella Typhimurium and Salmonella Enteritidis isolates from contaminated food samples from Palestine
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Original research
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Salmonella is one of the most frequently isolated foodborne pathogens. It is of major public health concern worldwide. Poultry meat and eggs represent important sources of Salmonellae organisms with an impact on consumers’ health. This study aims to evaluate the occurrence of Salmonella Typhimurium and Salmonella Enteritidis using multiplex PCR (mPCR) among isolates collected from samples of the local food market and to assess genetic relationships between isolates of S. Typhimurium, which was the only serotype isolated from the tested food samples.
This was achieved using virulence factors profling and fngerprint profling, which were assessed by random amplifed polymorphic DNA (RAPD-PCR) and repetitive sequence PCR (REP-PCR). Both enterobacterial repetitive intergenic
consensus (ERIC-PCR) and interspersed repetitive DNA sequence BOXAIR-PCR were used for this purpose.
The overall occurrence percentage of S. Typhimurium and S. Enteritidis out of 51 isolates was 54.9% and 0.0%, respectively. Only 13 out of 17 virulence genes were detected in these isolates. The occurrence of the detected virulence genes among these isolates was 100%, 50.0%,46.4%, 39.3%, 35.7%, 35.7%, 32.1%, 25.0%, 25.0%, 17.6%, 14.3%, 14.3%,
3.6% for invA, sopB, prgH, sitC, pefA, tolC, cdtB, msgA, sifA, iroN, spiA, ipfC and pagC, respectively. The remaining virulence genes were absent in all of the isolates. Based on the combination of the presence and absence of virulence
genes, eight profles were detected among these isolates, the most common genetic profle was V5 (each 32.1%). Based on this genetic profle at cut-off point 96.0%, both ERIC and BOX primers allowed for discrimination into 4 and 6 clusters or clones of 16 S. Typhimurium isolates, respectively. Results of PCR typing methods showed that, three strains clustered together using both ERIC-PCR and BOX-PCR typing methods and they had the same virulotype (V1), while other four strains also clustered together by both typing methods and had the same virulotype (V4).
Contamination of food with Salmonellae, especially with S. Typhimurium, was high and affected the microbiological quality of food. This emphasizes the need for rigorous public health and food safety control methods to lower the human health hazard and risk associated with Salmonellae infection.
 

Journal
Title
Journal of the Hellenic Veterinary Medical Society
Publisher
National Documentation Centre EKT.
Publisher Country
Greece
Indexing
Scopus
Impact Factor
0.516
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
74
Year
2023
Pages
6201-6211