rapid food test for liseriosis

A recent issue of CDR Weekly showed that Listeriosis is on the increase in certain parts of the UK and the Health Protection Agency has urged vigilance to combat this increase.

A food test from Oxoid can be used to ensure that products are free from this food-borne pathogen.

The Oxoid Listeria Rapid Test (OLRT) is designed for the detection of Listeria species in foods and environmental samples within 43 hours. Using the simple test protocol, a negative result can be available in as little as two working days after the sample is received in the testing laboratory. The procedure uses two carefully selected enrichment steps for the maximum recovery and growth of Listeria followed by an immunoassay in a lateral flow format. A heat-treated portion of the broth enrichment is added to the simple assay. A clear visual result is available in 20 minutes. No further manipulations are required.

The OLRT detects Listeria species (with the exception of the non-pathogenic Listeria grayi subsp. grayi and subsp. murrayi), it is not species specific. Therefore, it is a good indicator test for final product, raw material and environmental testing. This will be a useful addition to HACCP plans.

The culture of the test sample is in two sequential enrichments, each of 24 hours. Any Listeria organisms present in the sample are selectively enriched using growth conditions which are optimal for flagella expression.

Antigen Extraction, the second enrichment media is heated at 80°C in a water bath, for 20 minutes to extract the antigen. Blue latex particles contained within the Listeria device are sensitised with specific monoclonal antibodies to the B flagella antigen2 that is common to Listeria species. 135µl of sample is taken from the upper quarter of the heated test sample and added to the pad in the Sample Window at the bottom of the device. The sample and sensitized latex particles migrate along the test strip by capillary action. A line of immobilised Listeria specific monoclonal antibodies is situated under the Results Window. If the sample contains antigen, latex-antigen complexes form and are then trapped by the immobilised monoclonal antibodies, forming a clearly visible blue line; this indicates a positive result. If the B flagella antigen is not present, complexes do not form and a line does not appear. Excess, unbound latex will flow past the Results Window and is trapped by a non-specific antibody in the Control Window. This acts as an integral control feature, with a blue line forming to show that the test has been carried out correctly.

Listeria testing generally consists of two consecutive 24 hour selective enrichment broth cultures. The second broth is subcultured onto selective or diagnostic agar to distinguish presumptive Listeria colonies. These are then confirmed using biochemical tests. Total time to identification can take up to seven days. Even a negative result can take over 96 hours. Using the Oxoid Listeria Rapid Test method, which uses two 21 hour enrichments, a negative result can be achieved in as little as 43 hours. A presumptive positive result from the OLRT is also achieved in 43 hours.

For more information, visit www.oxoid.com

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