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Comparative Study
. 1999 Jul;22(3):195-202.

Detection of Salmonella spp. in food by a rapid PCR-hybridization procedure

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  • PMID: 10423737
Comparative Study

Detection of Salmonella spp. in food by a rapid PCR-hybridization procedure

A Nastasi et al. New Microbiol. 1999 Jul.

Abstract

A rapid and sensitive PCR-hybridization procedure for detection of Salmonella serovars in food samples was developed. This method is based on three subsequent steps: (1) extraction of nucleic acids from a 2 ml aliquot of the pre-enrichment medium used for the conventional culture method after 6 h of incubation at 37 degrees C; (2) amplification with primers selected from the sequences of invE and invA genes; (3) Southern blot and hybridization with a biotin labeled oligonucleotide probe. The entire procedure requires 30 h. The PCR-hybridization assay was able to detect as little as 50 fg of purified chromosomal DNA of S. typhimurium and 0.2 cfu g-1 of an artificially contaminated food sample. Of 245 food samples analyzed by culture and PCR-hybridization, 20 were positive by both methods and 16 were positive by PCR-hybridization only. None of the 209 PCR-negative samples tested positive by culture. The sensitivity, specificity, alpha and beta error values of the results of the PCR-hybridization procedure, compared with those of culture, were 100, 92.9, 0 and 7.1%, respectively. These results indicate that a short pre-enrichment and PCR-hybridization could be used as a screening test for the detection of Salmonella in food samples.

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