Research Article

ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE

Volume: 10 Number: 1 June 30, 2024
EN

ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE

Abstract

Due to the ability to synthesize a highly potent neurotoxin, Clostridium botulinum (C. botulinum) poses an important risk to food safety. Foodborne botulism is a neuroparalytic disease caused by the ingestion of neurotoxins produced by C. botulinum. Botulism commonly occurs as a result of consuming canned foods. In this study, the aim was to investigate the presence of C. botulinum and detect the genes producing A, B, E, and F toxins in C. botulinum isolates in homemade and commercial canned foods using the rapid, sensitive, and reliable Real-Time PCR technique. A total of 81 canned samples were collected, including 51 commercial and 30 homemade cans. The canned samples were initially enriched in a tryptone peptone glucose yeast (TPGY) medium. Subsequently, DNA isolation was performed using the foodproof® StarPrep Two Kit. After the isolation process, Real-Time PCR was conducted using the foodproof® C. botulinum Detection LyoKit and 5’ Nuclease (Biotecon, R60240) kit. Among all samples, only 2 samples were positive. Both positive samples were found to contain neurotoxin type A, were commercially canned foods, and were packaged in glass containers. It was also determined that one was a mixed vegetable side dish and the other was roasted red pepper. Consequently, it was concluded that commercially available canned foods in Türkiye could still pose a potential risk to public health due to the presence of C. botulinum. Therefore, it was recommended to perform quality control analyses through food inspections in companies involved in canned food production and sales.

Keywords

Supporting Institution

Harran University Scientific Research Projects Unit

Project Number

18056

Ethical Statement

Ethics Committee: The laboratory were used as material in the study, ethics committee permission is not required.

Thanks

This work was financially supported by Harran University Scientific Research Projects Unit.

References

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  6. Rawson, A. M., Dempster, A. W., Humphreys, C. M., Minton, N. P., “Pathogenicity and virulence of Clostridium botulinum”, Virulence, 14(1), 2205251, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2023.2205251
  7. Stumbo, C. R., Gross, C. E., Vinton, C., “Bacteriological studies relating to thermal processing of canned meats”, Food Research, 10, 260-272, 1945.
  8. Botan, Y., Öztürk, E., Şahin, O. T., Uğurlu, G., “An outbreak of foodborne botulism due to consumption of homemade roasted eggplant paste in Turkey”, Foodborne Pathogens and Disease, 18(2), 118-121, 2021.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Food Microbiology, Food Sciences (Other)

Journal Section

Research Article

Publication Date

June 30, 2024

Submission Date

February 16, 2024

Acceptance Date

June 5, 2024

Published in Issue

Year 2024 Volume: 10 Number: 1

APA
Durmaz, H., Yiğin, A., Kılıç Altun, S., & Aydemir, M. E. (2024). ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE. Middle East Journal of Science, 10(1), 58-69. https://doi.org/10.51477/mejs.1437831
AMA
1.Durmaz H, Yiğin A, Kılıç Altun S, Aydemir ME. ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE. MEJS. 2024;10(1):58-69. doi:10.51477/mejs.1437831
Chicago
Durmaz, Hisamettin, Akın Yiğin, Serap Kılıç Altun, and Mehmet Emin Aydemir. 2024. “ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium Botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE”. Middle East Journal of Science 10 (1): 58-69. https://doi.org/10.51477/mejs.1437831.
EndNote
Durmaz H, Yiğin A, Kılıç Altun S, Aydemir ME (June 1, 2024) ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE. Middle East Journal of Science 10 1 58–69.
IEEE
[1]H. Durmaz, A. Yiğin, S. Kılıç Altun, and M. E. Aydemir, “ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE”, MEJS, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 58–69, June 2024, doi: 10.51477/mejs.1437831.
ISNAD
Durmaz, Hisamettin - Yiğin, Akın - Kılıç Altun, Serap - Aydemir, Mehmet Emin. “ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium Botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE”. Middle East Journal of Science 10/1 (June 1, 2024): 58-69. https://doi.org/10.51477/mejs.1437831.
JAMA
1.Durmaz H, Yiğin A, Kılıç Altun S, Aydemir ME. ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE. MEJS. 2024;10:58–69.
MLA
Durmaz, Hisamettin, et al. “ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium Botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE”. Middle East Journal of Science, vol. 10, no. 1, June 2024, pp. 58-69, doi:10.51477/mejs.1437831.
Vancouver
1.Hisamettin Durmaz, Akın Yiğin, Serap Kılıç Altun, Mehmet Emin Aydemir. ASSESSING THE POTENTIAL PUBLIC HEALTH RISK OF Clostridium botulinum TOXIN GENES IN CANNED FOOD : A LABORATORY EXPERIENCE IN TÜRKİYE. MEJS. 2024 Jun. 1;10(1):58-69. doi:10.51477/mejs.1437831

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