INACTIVATION OF FOOD-BORNE PATHOGENS WITH MAGAININ PEPTIDES

Citation
La. Abler et al., INACTIVATION OF FOOD-BORNE PATHOGENS WITH MAGAININ PEPTIDES, Journal of food protection, 58(4), 1995, pp. 381-388
Citations number
26
Categorie Soggetti
Food Science & Tenology","Biothechnology & Applied Migrobiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0362028X
Volume
58
Issue
4
Year of publication
1995
Pages
381 - 388
Database
ISI
SICI code
0362-028X(1995)58:4<381:IOFPWM>2.0.ZU;2-7
Abstract
The antimicrobial activity of magainin 2 (mag 2) and magainin 2 amide (mag 2 amide) was determined for 13 pathogenic bacterial test strains associated with food-borne disease. Magainin 2 (100 mu g/ml) initially inhibited the growth of some of the test strains, but recovery of the cells occurred between the 5th and 24th h of exposure to the peptide. Of the 13 bacterial strains tested, Salmonella heidelberg 3432-2 demo nstrated the greatest recovery (from an initial reduction of similar t o 7 log cycles). Magainin 2 amide exhibited greater inactivation acros s all bacterial test strains compared to mag 2. After 24 h of exposure , all 13 test strains were completely inactivated with log(10) reducti ons in the cell population exceeding 8.7. The minimal inhibitory conce ntration of mag 2 amide (total inactivation after 24 h of exposure to mag 2 amide) was determined for the 13 test strains and ranged from <3 mu g/ml to 50 mu g/ml. At 4 degrees and 20 degrees C, mag 2 amide exh ibited less bactericidal activity than at 37 degrees C for the organis ms tested. While the addition of bovine serum albumin to the inactivat ion assay medium at 37 degrees C reduced the bactericidal activity of mag 2 amide against the test strains, reductions in cell population st ill exceeded 3 log cycles.