Salmonella Salamae and S. Waycross isolated from Nile perch in Lake Victoria show limited human pathogenic potential
Non- enterica subspecies of Salmonella enterica are rarely associated with human infections. Paradoxically, food safety legislations consider the entire genus Salmonella as pathogenic to humans. Globally, large amounts of seafoods are rejected and wasted due to findings of Salmonella . To inform bet...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2022-03, Vol.12 (1), p.4229-4229, Article 4229 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Non-
enterica
subspecies of
Salmonella enterica
are rarely associated with human infections. Paradoxically, food safety legislations consider the entire genus
Salmonella
as pathogenic to humans. Globally, large amounts of seafoods are rejected and wasted due to findings of
Salmonella
. To inform better food safety decisions, we investigated the pathogenicity of
Salmonella
Salamae 42:r- and
Salmonella
Waycross isolated from Nile perch from Lake Victoria. Genome-wide analysis revealed absence of significant virulence determinants including on key
Salmonella
pathogenicity islands in both serovars. In epithelial cells,
S.
Salamae showed a weak invasion ability that was lower than the
invH
mutant of
S.
Typhimiurium used as negative control. Similarly,
S
. Salamae could not replicate inside macrophages. Moreover, intracellular replication in
S.
Waycross strains was significantly lower compared to the wild type
S.
Typhimurium. Our findings suggest a low pathogenicity of
S
. Salamae reinforcing the existing literature that non-
enterica
subspecies are avirulent. We propose that food legislations and actions taken on findings of
Salmonella
are revisited to avoid wasting valuable sea- and other foods. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-022-08200-5 |