Fluorescent-antibody method useful for detecting viable but nonculturable Salmonella spp. in chlorinated wastewater

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Abstract

An indirect fluorescent-antibody (IFA) technique, which employed adsorbed Behring polyvalent I O antiserum, was used to detect Salmonella spp. in environmental water systems. The IFA method used in this study detected 95% of Salmonella serotypes encountered in human infections in France, with a sensitivity threshold of 7.5 x 103 bacteria per ml of wastewater. Specificity was assessed by testing IFA against Salmonella-free seawater and a variety of bacteria other than Salmonella spp. When used to examine raw and chlorinated wastewater over a 2-month period, the IFA method was successful in detecting Salmonella spp. in all 12 of the samples examined, with total numbers determined to be 4.5 x 105 to 3.3 x 107 salmonellae per 100 ml. In comparison, for the same samples, enumeration by culture, using the most-probable-number technique, was effective in detecting Salmonella spp. in only four of eight raw-water samples and one of four chlorinated water samples tested. Three samples were further tested by using the direct viable count procedure combined with IFA and results showed that 5 to 31.5% of the Salmonella spp. enumerated by this method in chlorinated water were substrate responsive.

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Desmonts, C., Minet, J., Colwell, R., & Cormier, M. (1990). Fluorescent-antibody method useful for detecting viable but nonculturable Salmonella spp. in chlorinated wastewater. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 56(5), 1448–1452. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.56.5.1448-1452.1990

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