# Flow cytometry to assess the counts and physiological state of   Cronobacter sakazakii cells after heat exposure

**Authors:** Paloma De-La-Cal-Sabater, Irma Caro, Javier Mateo, Maria J. Castro,, Maria J. Cao, Emiliano J. Quinto

arXiv: 1906.11045 · 2019-06-27

## TL;DR

This study demonstrates that flow cytometry can effectively assess the physiological state of Cronobacter sakazakii after heat treatment, revealing compromised cells undetectable by traditional plate counts, thus improving safety evaluation of infant formula.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the use of flow cytometry to detect viable but non-culturable C. sakazakii cells post-heat treatment, providing a more comprehensive assessment of bacterial viability.

## Key findings

- Flow cytometry detects compromised cells not seen in plate counts.
- Mild heat treatments do not fully eliminate bacteria but compromise their membranes.
- Good correlation between flow cytometry and plate count results.

## Abstract

Cronobacter sakazakii is an opportunistic pathogen associated with outbreaks of neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis, septicemia, and meningitis. Reconstituted powdered infant formulae (PIF) is the most common vehicle of infection. Plate count methods do not provide direct information on the physiological status of cells. Flow cytometry (FC) has been used to gain insights into the physiological states of C. sakazakii after heat treatments, and to compare FC results with plate counts. The percentage of compromised cells increased as the percentage of live cells increased after the 100 C treatment. However, the number of compromised cells after 60 or 65 C treatments decreased as the percentage of live cells increased, showing that both mild temperatures would not be completely effective eliminating all bacteria but compromising their membranes, and showing that mild heat treatments are not enough to guarantee the safety of PIF. FC was capable to detect C. sakazakii compromised cells that cannot be detected with classical plate count methods, thus it could be used to decreasing the risk of pathogenic viable but non-culturable cells to be in the ingested food. Linear regression analysis showed good correlations between plate count results vs FC results.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1906.11045