STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS, ENTEROTOXINS GENES AND SALMONELLA TYPHYIMURIUM IN CHICKEN MEAT AND ORGANS

Document Type : Research article

Authors

1 University of Jeddah, College of Science, Department of Biology, Saudi Arabia and Department of Food Hygiene, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, New Valley University, Egypt.

2 Poultry Diseases Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Assiut University-New Valley Branch, Egypt

Abstract

This study investigated presence of Staphylococcus aureus and Salmonella typhimurium and some of their enterotoxins and virulence genes in live chicken and chicken meat in New Valley, Egypt. 200 broilers samples were collected as following;Liver and blood of 100 clinically diseased, 6 weeks old chicken were obtained from five broilers farms in New Valley governorate for surveillance of the microorganisms in poultry while, 100 freshly slaughtered broilers chicken which apparent healthy were collected from public live bird markets. The samples were meat specimens from the breast muscle, thigh muscle, liver, and blood (100 of each). The identified strains were screened for enterotoxin genes of Staph. aureus (SEA to SAE) genes. Prevalence of S. aureus in live chicken was higher than S. typhimurium whichwas 76% and 18%, respectively which was higher in blood than liver samples. On the other hand, the incidence of S. aureus was higher than S. typhimurium in apparently healthy and symptomatically diseased broilers. In chicken meat was with an overall incidence of 56.67%. The total prevalence of S. aureus and S. typhimurium was 51.33% and 5.33% respectively the highest microbial load was in liver samples followed by breast muscle then thigh muscle samples. S. aureus SAB gene was the only detected enterotoxins gene among chicken samples. Raw poultry meat available for consumers in Egypt often contaminated with pathogenic zoonotic bacterial agents.

Keywords


AssiutUniversity web-site: www.aun.edu.eg

 

STAPHYLOCOCCUS AUREUS, ENTEROTOXINS GENES AND SALMONELLA TYPHYIMURIUM IN CHICKEN MEAT AND ORGANS

 

NAGWA THABET ELSHRAWAY 1 and MOHAMED SHAKER ABDEL HAFEZ 2

1 Food Hygiene Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, AssiutUniversity-NewValleyBranch, Egypt.

2 Poultry Diseases Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, AssiutUniversity-NewValleyBranch, Egypt.

 

Received: 30 December 2017;       Accepted: 30 January 2018

 

 

ABSTRACT

 

This study investigated presence of Staphylococcus aureus and Salmonella typhimurium and some of their enterotoxins and virulence genes in live chicken and chicken meat in New Valley, Egypt. 200 broilers samples were collected as following;Liver and blood of 100 clinically diseased, 6 weeks old chicken were obtained from five broilers farms in New Valley governorate for surveillance of the microorganisms in poultry while, 100 freshly slaughtered broilers chicken which apparent healthy were collected from public live bird markets. The samples were meat specimens from the breast muscle, thigh muscle, liver, and blood (100 of each). The identified strains were screened for enterotoxin genes of Staph. aureus (SEA to SAE) genes. Prevalence of S. aureus in live chicken was higher than S. typhimurium whichwas 76% and 18%, respectively which was higher in blood than liver samples. On the other hand, the incidence of S. aureus was higher than S. typhimurium in apparently healthy and symptomatically diseased broilers. In chicken meat was with an overall incidence of 56.67%. The total prevalence of S. aureus and S. typhimurium was 51.33% and 5.33% respectively the highest microbial load was in liver samples followed by breast muscle then thigh muscle samples. S. aureus SAB gene was the only detected enterotoxins gene among chicken samples. Raw poultry meat available for consumers in Egypt often contaminated with pathogenic zoonotic bacterial agents.

 

Key words:Chicken, food poisoning, PCR. Salmonella typhimurium, Staphylococcus aureus.

 

 


INTRODUCTION

 

Staphylococcosis and salmonellosis infection causing great importance problems hazarding chicken industry and consumers’ public health (Ezzat et al., 2014; Butcher et al., 2015). S. aureus infected live chicken appear as abscesses on the foot bottom called “bumble foot”, which leading to painful walking on the foot for the bird. S. typhimurium like many Salmonella species are normally inhabitant in the digestive tract of fowl and excreted in the feces of infected animals and people, people become infected usually by eating undercooked eggs or chicken meat. Salmonella organisms can infect the ovaries of hens and thus infect the egg before the egg laid or by contaminated food by animal feces or by infected food handlers who do not adequately wash their hands after using a toilet. S. aureus, and S. typhimurium are the main predominant food poisoning bacterial agents transmitted by handling and improper sanitation which causing foodborne disease in humans worldwide. The  lethal  enterotoxin

 

 
   

 


Corresponding author: Dr. NAGWA THABET ELSHRAWAY

E-mail address:dr.nagwa2004@yahoo.com

Present address: Food Hygiene Department, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Assiut University-New Valley Branch, Egypt.

 

 

produced by S. aureus is a common cause of food poisoning. The most common symptoms of food poisoning are fever, pneumonia, nausea, wound infections and gastrointestinal disturbances (EFSA 2010; Aydin et al., 2011).

 

In Egypt, lack of enough poultry slaughterhouses, insufficient marketing infrastructure and traditional preference of consumers of freshly slaughtered poultry consumption, chicken, and other domestic poultry led consumers to buy live birds from markets and slaughtering in the same area or at home. Live chicken markets are an important chain to promote spreading and maintenance of livestock zoonosis pathogens. There are two types of poultry markets in Egypt: retail shops and traditional live bird markets where never or minimal, veterinary inspection is applied (Khalafalla et al., 2015).

 

Food poisoning is an important issue overall worldwide consumer’s health due to its fast contagiousness and lethality.Contaminated raw or improper cooked chicken meat is one of the major sources of food-borne pathogens (Shafizi et al., 2016). Many of food-borne zoonotic diseases commonly found in the intestines of healthy food-producing animals and birds (Al-Bahry et al., 2014).

 

S. aureus is one of the most ordinary found pathogenic bacteria with difficulty of its elimination from the human environment. It is the main causative agent of food intoxication by its diversity of enterotoxins (Iandolo, 1989). Twenty different types of staphylococcal enterotoxin, including SEA through SEE, SEG through SER, and SEU have already identified, however, only a few of the toxin serotypes are frequently associated with food poisoning outbreaks (Martin et al., 2004). Staphylococcosis infections affect almost all the avian species. Over 36 Staphylococcus of normal birds’ skin inhabitants may infect them after wound entrance to the bird body or after trimming of beak or toenails, inflammation, vaccinations, or chronic infection and impairment of the bird immunity.

 

Poultry meat is one of the major vehicles of S. typhimurium infections is considered one of the major zoonotic food-borne pathogens representing an important public health problem worldwide. It can cause a variety of clinical manifestations ranging from mild gastroenteritis to bacteremia and extra intestinal localized infections involving many organs (Rabie et al., 2012). It is necessary to know the extent to which the poultry industry and the public health exposure to zoonotic diseases via poultry and poultry meat as observed in poultry slaughtered in markets. The main objectives of this study were to assess the role of fresh chicken meat sold in the New Valley governorate as one of Egyptian live bird markets in the transmission of entero-pathogenic strains of S. aureus and S. typhimurium.

 

MATERIALS AND METHODS

 

The study area:This study was conducted in Elkharga, the capital of New Valley Governorate.

Samples collection:

- Live broilers: 100 clinically diseased chicken 6 weeks old were collected from five broilers farms in NewValley. The samples were liver and blood of each bird.

- Chicken meat and offal samples: 100 freshly slaughtered broilers chickens apparently healthy were collected from public live bird markets. The samples included breast and thigh muscles, liver, and blood (100 of each) which were analyzed for poultry bacterial burden using specific and selective nutrient media and molecular diagnosis. All data was recorded and samples were transported with minimal delay in an ice-box to the laboratory for microbiological and molecular examinations. The identified strains were screened for S. aureus (SEA to SAE) enterotoxin genes.

 

Samples preparation:Samples were prepared following the protocols of APHA, (1992)as the following: Ten grams of each sample were weighted under complete aseptic conditions, and transferred into sterile polyethylene bag containing 90 ml of sterile 0.1% peptone water (Oxoid®). Samples blended in a stomacher (lab-blender, 400) for one minute to provide 10-1 dilution from which serial tenfold dilutions were prepared.

 

Microbiological examination:

1 - Isolation of S. aureus was performed following the protocols of Valls et al. (2000): The enriched broth was plated on Baird-Parker Agar (Oxoid®, CM 275) supplemented with Egg Yolk-Tellurite Emulsion (Oxoid®, SR 54).

2 - Isolation of S. typhimurium was performed according to USDA and FSIS, (2004) protocols as following: 1ml of diluted sample suspension was enriched in 9 ml of Rappaport-Vassiliadis broth (RV; Oxoid®), incubated at 43°C/24 hr., followed by streaking a loopful of selective enrichment broth on Xylose lysine deoxycholate (XLD®)agar (Merk®) and Salmonella Shigella (SS) agar media and incubated at 37°C/24 hr.

 

All the isolates, preserved on nutrient agar (Oxoid®), were examined microscopically by Gram's stain to reveal morphological arrangement and staining reaction and biochemically identified according to Quinn et al. (1994). Ten pure positive S. aureus isolates were used for further enterotoxins and pathogenicity gene identification by PCR.

 

PCR detection:genomic DNA extracted from the selected S. aureus, and S. typhimurium isolates from chicken samples using the QIAamp DNA Mini kit (Qiagen®, Germany, GmbH). Briefly, 200 µl of the sample suspension incubated with 10 µl of proteinase K and 200 µl of lysis at 56C/10 min. After incubation, 200 µl of 100% ethanol added to the lysate. The sample washed and centrifuged. Nucleic acid eluted with 100 µl of elution buffer provided in the kit. Primers used supplied from (Biobasic®, Canada) as listed in the Table 1. Primers were utilized in a 25µl PCR reaction containing 12.5 µl of 2X DreamTaq Green Mastermix kit (Fermentas®, Germany), 1 µl of each primer of 10 pmol concentration, 4.5 µl of water, and 6 µl of DNA template. The reactions performed in applied biosystem 2720 thermal cycler as initial denaturation at 94C/4 min, followed by 35 cycles of 94C denaturation for 30 sec, annealing (temperature, mentioned in table 1)/30 sec, and extension at 72C/45 sec. Followed by the cycling of final extension at 72C/5 min. The PCR products were separated by electrophoresis on 1.2% agarose gel (Applichem, Germany, GmbH) in 1X TBE buffer at room temperature using gradients of 5V/cm. For gel analysis, 10 µl of PCR products loaded in each gel slot and 100 bp plus DNA Ladders (Qiagen, Germany, GmbH®) used to determine fragment sizes. Control positive and control negative were included in each reaction. The gel photographed by a gel documentation system (Alpha Innotech, Biometra®).



Table 1: Primers sequences, target genes, amplicon sizes and annealing temperatures of PCR reactions.

 

Target agent

Target gene

Primers sequences

Amplified segment (bp)

Annealing

Reference

S. aureus

16rRNA

5-GTAGGTGGCAAGCGTTATCC-3

228

60

Monday and Bohach, (1999)

5-CGC ACATCAGCGTCAG-3

 

 

 

Sea

GGTTATCAATGTGCGGGTGG

102

50˚C

.

 

 

Mehrotra et al, (2000)

CGGCACTTTTTTCTCTTCGG

Seb

GTATGGTGGTGTAACTGAGC

164

CCAAATAGTGACGAGTTAGG

Sec

AGATGAAGTAGTTGATGTGTATGG

451

CACACTTTTAGAATCAACCG

Sed

CCAATAATAGGAGAAAATAAAAG

278

ATTGGTATTTTTTTTCGTTC

See

AGGTTTTTTCACAGGTCATCC

209

CTTTTTTTTCTTCGGTCAATC

Salmonella spp.

Gene-specific

ATCGCTGACTTATGCAATCG

204

50˚C

Alvarez et al., (2004)

CGGGTTGCGTTATAGGTCTG

Species-specific

TTGTTCACTTTTTACCCCTGA A

401

CCCTGACAGCCGTTAGATATT

 


RESULTS

 

1- Prevalence of S. aureus, and S. typhimurium in the examined diseased and apparent healthy broilers chicken samples:The prevalence of S. aureus and S. typhimurium bacteria from life symptomatically diseased chicken liver and blood samples are presented in Table 2; Results revealed that the total prevalence of S. aureus and S. typhimurium was 152/200 (76%) and 36/200 (18%) respectively. S. aureus could be recovered from 72 and 80% of the examined liver and blood samples respectively. Regarding, S. typhimurium 20% and 16% from blood and liver samples respectively proved to be positive. Comparison between infection percent of S. aureus, and S. typhimurium in the examined broilers chicken which was apparent healthy from life bird markets and symptomatically diseased from broilers farms reveled that; the incidence of S. aureus was higher than S. typhimurium in both cases as following; the incidence of S. aureus infection was about 51.33% and 80% in apparently healthy and symptomatically diseased broilers respectively while the S. typhimurium incidence was 5.33% and 20% respectively in apparently healthy and symptomatically diseased broilers (Figure 1).

 

2- The prevalence of S. aureus and S. typhimurium in chicken meat and liver samples: The overall prevalence of S. aureus and S. typhimurium in different chicken meat and liver samples presented in Table 3 and Figure 2 was 170/300 (56.67%). The total prevalence of S. aureus, and S. typhimurium was 154/300 (51.33%) and 16/300 (5.33%) respectively. S. aureus could be detected in 56 (56%), 53 (53%) and 45 (45%) of the examined liver, breast muscle, and thigh muscle, respectively. S. typhimurium isolates were 6 (6%), for liver and only 5 (5%) for each thigh and pectoral meat samples. However, S. aureus was the highest prevalence rate in chicken samples while, S. typhimurium recorded the lowest incidence rate in all samples.

 

3- The prevalence of S. aureus 5 main enterotoxins (A, B, C, D and E) evaluated from chicken meat and liver samples illustrated in Table 4 and Figure 3: Enterotoxin (B) was the only detected enterotoxin, its highest concentration was reported in 3 liver (30%) followed by 2 of each pectoral and thigh samples 20% for each.

 

 


Table 2: Prevalence of S. aureus, and S. typhimurium in the examined life diseased broilers chicken samples (n. = 100 each)

Samples

S. aureus

S. typhimurium

No (%)

No (%)

Liver

72 (72)

16 (16)

Blood Samples

80 (80)

20 (20)

Total (No=200)

152 (76)

36 (18)

 

 

 

Figure 1: Comparison between infection percent of S. aureus, and S. typhimurium in the examined broilers chicken samples according to clinical diseases

 

Table 3: Prevalence of S. aureus, and S. typhimurium in the examined chicken samples (n. = 100 of each)

 

Samples

S. aureus

S.  typhimurium

Total

No= 300

No (%)

No (%)

No (%)

Breast muscle

53 (53)

5 (5)

58 (58)

Thigh  muscle

45 (45)

5 (5)

50 (50)

Liver

56 (56)

6(6)

62 (62)

Total (No=300)

154 (51.33)

16 (5.33)

170 (56.67)

 

 

Figure 2: Agarose gel electrophoresis of specific dose-dependent amplification of Staph. aureus

PCR amplification 270 bp products of DNA extracted from Staph. aureus chicken samples respectively.

Table 4: Prevalence of enterotoxigenic S. aureus isolated from the collected chicken samples evaluated by PCR.

 

Samples

Enterotoxigenic genes of Staph. aureus

Sea

No (%)

Seb

No (%)

Sec

No (%)

Sed

No (%)

Sae

No (%)

Breast muscle

ND

2 (20%)

*ND

ND

ND

Thigh muscle

ND

2 (20%)

*ND

ND

ND

Chicken liver

ND

3 (30%)

*ND

ND

ND

Total

No =30

0

7 (23.33%)

0

0

0

*ND: Not Detected

 

 

Figure 3: Agarose gel electrophoresis of specific dose-dependent amplification of S. aureus pathogenic gene (Seb)

PCR amplification of the enterotoxins (Seb) 164 bp products of DNA extracted from S. aureus chicken samples respectively

 


DISCUSSION

 

S. aureus, and S. typhimurium transmitted in between chicken to the contact of live birds or through consumption of contaminated food (e.g. chicken meat) directly by the microorganisms or through their enterotoxins (Niyonzima et al., 2016). Causing different signs in infected birds such as; diarrhea, decrease production, acute septicemia to chronic osteomyelitis and chicks’ mortalities (Awan and Matsumoto, 1998; Ezzat et al., 2014). In addition to food poisoning, which ranged from mild to severe include fever, stomach pain, nausea, abdominal cramps, diarrhea, vomiting and dehydration (Abd El-Malek1 et al., 2010). The finding from this study found that the prevalence of S. aureus (76%) was higher than S. typhimurium (16%) which was higher in blood than liver, samples, also, the incidence of S. aureus was higher than S. typhimurium in apparently healthy and symptomatically diseased broilers. These results agrees with that obtained by Ezzat et al. (2014) who reported 18.5% salmonellosis in Egyptian broilers and were Kudaka et al. (2006) who recorded an incidence of 18% Japanese broilers. However, higher results were reported by Fofana et al. (2006) who recorded 62.5% salmonellosis in Sengal broilers. Salmonellosis was reported (21.99%) earlier in Bangladesh by Rahman et al. (2004) while in China, 52.2% was recorded by Yang et al. (2011). In Saudi Arabia, S. typhimurium reported about 22.22% in chicken (Moussa et al., 2010). In Nigeria, salmonellosis prevalence in apparently healthy chicken, clinically sick chicken was 6.6% and 11.6% respectively by Nwiyi et al. (2015) while, also in Nigeria, Dashe et al. (2013) found S. aureus inabout 20.5% of clinically sick birds and 2.3% from apparently healthy chickens. On the other hand, lower results recorded in Brazil (2.7% salmonellosis) was reported by Medeiros et al. (2011). Staphylococcosis prevalence reached to 44% in chicken in Qena, Egypt (Karmi, 2013). While in Turkey Citak and Duman (2011) recorded 47.2% Staphylococcosis in chicken.

 

Staphylococcosis in chicken varies from acute ascites, septicemia, and mortalities to chronic osteomyelitis but infection commonly appears as a systemic disease proceeded on hock joint as osteomyelitis, synovitis and/or bumble foot, which look like a large swollen abscess on the foot bottom, which resulted in restriction of the affected bird movement. Chicken salmonellosis is deadly in young chicks, transmitted to the chick through the egg from infected hens or from chick to another in the incubator. In the chicken, it spread through direct contact between birds, using contaminated water containers and feeders from feces resulting in inflammation of the intestine, which appears as white diarrhea (Skeeles 1997; EI-Jakee et al., 2013; Ezzat et al., 2014).

 

Chicken staphylococcosis and salmonellosis can be transmitted to humans by eating infected eggs, using unsanitary practices. Staphylococcal food poisoning is one of the most common causes of gastroenteritis worldwide. Symptoms have a rapid onset of food poisoning signs within 2-4 hours after ingestion of thermostable Staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs). Since SEs are more stable than S. aureus bacteria, it is possible to test food product and obtain negative S. aureus culture results and positive SEs tests (EI-Jakee et al., 2013). In the present study, the total S. aureus prevalence in chicken meat and liver was 51.33%, which was higher than the previously reported from Egypt by Osman et al. (2015) who detected 15% S. aureus from chicken meat. Kumar et al. (2011) recoded 10.8% of S. aureus enterotoxins in South Asian. However, higher results were reported by Khalifa et al. (2014) who reported about 63% while Gwida and Elgohary (2015) found only about 22% S. aureus from Mansoura, Egypt chicken meat. Mathenge et al. (2015) detected 37.4% of meat products contaminated with S. aureus in Kenya.

 

Salmonellosis is one of the most important zoonotic bacterial pathogens of food-borne infection all around the world. In the present, study the total prevalence of S. typhimurium was 5.0% in chicken meat and liver. Controversially, Mohamed and Aly (1998) failed to detect Salmonella spp. in 30 chicken collected from different localities in Assiut city, Egypt. These differences in the prevalence of Salmonella in chicken referred to many factors, such as isolation methods, sample type, size, and seasonal variations and geographical location.

 

Regarding the site of contamination of the examined bacteria, the total contamination rate of the two recovered bacteria was highest in liver samples (62.0%), followed by breast muscles (58.0%) and thigh muscles (50.0%). 

 

Egyptians chicken consumers usually buy live chicken from public live bird markets and slaughter it immediately after selection in the markets using the same primitive manual equipment’s in slaughtering, feathering and evisceration that considered excellent sources to spreading microbial contamination to the slaughtered bird (Oladele-Bukola and Odetokun, 2014; Khalafalla et al., 2015). Other reasons for relying on live bird sales are that ‘on-the-spot’ butchering means product substitution is less likely. Slaughter, plucking, and evisceration lead to carcass contamination will have high levels of zoonotic bacteria when a positive flockslaughtered. Unless all the necessary precautions taken along the poultry production, marketing, and processing chains, contaminated poultry meat could be harmful to humans. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) stated that 25% of healthy worker’s skin or nostrils carry S. aureus and transmitted to the chicken meat during improper personal hygiene by handling and processing (Gwida and El-Gohary, 2015).

 

Egyptian Organization Specification (2005) and European regulations (2005) prevent consumption of any food containing any amount of S. typhimurium. In the present study, the detection of S. aureus and S. typhimuriumwith their poultry impacts and zoonotic importance can only control by exceeding the standards public health hazards control systems in poultry farms, raises the needs for proper implementations of preventative programs through sanitation and sound management, disinfection and proper use of antibacterial agents and regular surveillance.

 

From public health perspectives, SEs causes about 95% of humans’ food poisoning. Enterotoxins increase the potential consumer's risk in the absence of strict hygienic measures (Clarisse et al., 2013; Al-Jumaily et al., 2014; Mathenge et al., 2015). S. aureus can contaminate foods through contact with contaminated hands, materials, and surfaces. Considering this hazard, meat and meat products should not subject to unnecessary contamination and they should be free from such serious pathogen to ensure a maximum margin of consumer safety. In this study, SEB was prevalent in chicken meat isolates. However, the enterotoxin genes not uniformly distributed among all S. aureus strains (Dinges et al., 2000). It is known that 59% of staphylococcal food poisoning outbreaks are caused by SEA to SEE (Bergdoll, 1989).

 

In conclusion, this survey revealed that raw poultry meat available for consumers in Egypt often contaminated with zoonotic bacterial agents. Furthermore, several strains were positive for the several putative virulence marker genes as well as enterotoxin genes. All these findings suggest that the consumption of undercooked meat or food cross-contaminated with zoonotic bacteria may pose a serious threat to consumer health. Therefore, there is a need for enhanced efforts to avoid foodborne pathogens. Adequate cooking of meat, the personal and equipment cleanliness and chemical disinfectants, hygienic handling, storage and effectively processing reduce bacterial infection. Therefore, shutting down live poultry markets is extremely effective in preventing human cases. However, even temporary shutdowns create economic problems but should consider.

 

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Niyonzima, Eug_ene; Ongol, M.P.; Brostaux, Y.; Koulagenko, N.K., Daube, G., Kimonyo, A. and Sindic, M. (2016): Daily intake and bacteriological quality of meat consumed in the households of Kigali, Rwanda. Food Control 69: 108-114.

Nwiyi, Paul, O.; Soyoola Mobolalen and Oguoma, Igwe, O. (2015): Detection of virulence genes in salmonella isolated from chicken and chicken waste water. Global Advanced Research Journal of Microbiology. 4(11): 125-129.

Oladele-Bukola, MO. and Odetokun, IA. (2014): Prevalence of bovine fasciolosis at the Ibadan municipal abattoir, Nigeria. African Journal of Food, Agriculture, Nutrition and Development, 14(4): 9055–9070.

Osman, M.; Amer, M.; Badr, M. and Saad, S. (2015): Prevalence and antimicrobial resistance profile of Staphylococcus species in chicken and beef raw meat in Egypt. Foodborne Pathog Dis 12(5): 406-413.

Quinn, P.J., M.E. Carter, B.K. Markey and G. Carter, (1994): Clinical Veterinary Microbiology, Mosby yearbook Europe Ltd.

Rabie, S.N.; Khalifa, N.O.; Radwan, M.E. and Afify, J.S. (2012): Epidemiological and molecular studies of salmonella isolates from chicken, chicken meat and human in Toukh, Egypt. Global Veterinaria 8 (2): 128-132.

Rahman, MA.; Samad, MA.; Rahman, MB. and Kabir, SML. (2004): Bacterio-pathological studies on salmonellosis, colibacillosis and pasteurellosis in natural and experimental infections in chickens. Bangladesh J. Vet. Med. 2: 1-8.

Shafizi, A.W.; Mohammad Ridzuan, M.S.; Ubong, A.; New, C.Y.; Mohhiddin, O.; Toh, P.S.; Chai, L.C. and Son, R. (2016): Assessing Staphylococcus aureus in ready to eat (RTE) food and risk assessment of food premises in Putrajaya. International Food Research Journal 23(4): 1761-1766.

Skeeles, J.K. (1997): Staphylococcosis. Pages 247–253 in: Diseases of Poultry. 10th ed. B. W. Calnek, ed. Iowa State Univ. Press, Ames, IA.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Food and Drug Administration, (2004): Food Processing, Annex 6. FDA/Center for Food safety and Applied Nutrition. on line: http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/dms/fc99-a6.html.

Valls, S.; Nacente, B. and Coll, S. (2000): Handbook of Microbiological Culture Media, International Ed. Pp. 17-382. Schalau Chemie, S.A., Spain. Scharlau Microbiology (eds.). 

Yang, B.; Xi, M.; Wang, X.; Cui, S.; Yue, T.; Hao, H.; Wang, Y.; Cui, Y.; Alali, WQ.; Meng, J.; Walls, I.; Wong, DM. and Doyle, MP. (2011): Prevalence of salmonella on raw poultry at retail markets in China. J Food Prot 74: 1724-1728.

 

 

 


 

جينات سموم البکتيريا العنقودية والسالمونيلا تيفي ميوريم في لحوم واحشاء الدواجن

 

نجوى ثابت الشعراوي ، محمد شاکر عبد الحافظ

 

E-mail: dr.nagwa2004@yahoo.com    Assiut University web-site: www.aun.edu.eg

 

 تعتبر اصابات البکتيريا العنقودية والسالمونيلا وسمومها من اهم المخاطر التي تهدد صناعة الدواجن وصحة مستهلکيها. لذلک اهتمت هذه الدراسة بالتقصي عن مدى انتشار البکتيريا العنقودية والسالمونيلا تيفي ميوريم وسمومها وجينات الضراوة في الدجاج المتداول في اسواق الوادي الجديد قبل وبعد ذبحه. وذلک بفحص عدد 200 دجاجة منها 100 دجاجة بعمر 6 اسابيع وتظهر عليها اعراض مرضية تم جمعها من 5 مزارع داجنة في الوادي الجديد. حيث تم اخذ (اکبادها وعينات دم) من کل منها. کذلک تم جمع 100 عينة من لحوم الدجاج المتداول في اسواق الوادي الجدي والظاهر عليه علامات الصحة التامة فور ذبحه. حيث کانت العينات هي لحوم الصدر والفخذ بالاضافة لکبد لکل دجاجة مذبوحة من العينات محل الدراسة ثم تم اجراء الفحص البکتري المعملي للکشف عن البکتريا العنقودية والسالمونيلا تيفي ميوريم ثم الفحص الجيني للکشف عن انواع السموم في البکتريا العنقودية. وبالفحص وجد ان معدلات انتشار البکتريا العنقودية اعلى من السالمونيلا تيفي ميوريم في الدجاج الحي حيث کان 76% و 18% على التوالي. کذلک سجلت الاصابة بالبکتريا العنقودية نسب اعلى في لحوم الدجاج المتداول في الوادي الجديد 51.33% و 5.33% على الترتيب. کما اظهرت الدراسة معدلات اصابة اعلى في اکباد الدجاج يليه لحوم الصدر ثم الافخاذ. اما بالنسبة لسموم البکتريا العنقودية فتم الکشف عن وجود جينات نوع واحد فقط من السموم وهو النوع (ب). مما سبق استخلصت الدراسة وجود نسب عالية من البکتريا الممرضة وسمومها في لحوم واحشاء الدجاج المتداول في اسواق الوادي الجديد.   

 

 

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