El. Pickett et Ea. Murano, SENSITIVITY OF LISTERIA-MONOCYTOGENES TO SANITIZERS AFTER EXPOSURE TOA CHEMICAL SHOCK, Journal of food protection, 59(4), 1996, pp. 374-378
We tested the hypothesis that exposure of Listeria monocytogenes to su
blethal levels of sanitizers (chemical shock) could affect survival to
a subsequent exposure to lethal levels and the ability of the cells t
o attach to stainless steel surfaces. L. monocytogenes was exposed to
an acidic anionic sanitizer, a chlorine-based sanitizer, an iodophor,
and a quaternary ammonium compound, as well as to citric, lactic, and
propionic acids. The cells were exposed to sublethal levels of each sa
nitizer for up to 60 min (chemical shock), followed by exposure to eit
her the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) for 48 h, to the lethal
level for 48 h, or to the MIC for 40 min followed by the lethal level
for 48 h. No significant difference in survival was observed with mos
t of the sanitizers used. However, exposure to a chemical shock with t
he acid anionic sanitizer for at least 10 min resulted in survival of
the cells in the MIC of this sanitizer, as well as in the lethal level
, but only when the cells were first exposed to the MIC for 40 min. De
liberate dissociation of citric acid by pH adjustment also resulted in
survival of chemically shocked cells to lethal levels of this acid, s
uggesting that exposure to the dissociated form somehow enabled cells
to survive exposure to lethal levels of the acid. Chemical shock did n
ot affect attachment of the cells to stainless-steel chips.