Prevalence and transmission characteristics of Listeria species from ruminants in farm and slaughtering environments in China

Listeria monocytogenes is an important foodborne pathogen, and is ubiquitously distributed in the natural environment. Cattle and sheep, as natural hosts, can transmit L. monocytogenes to related meat and dairy products. In this study, the prevalence, distribution, and transmission characteristics o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Emerging microbes & infections 2021-01, Vol.10 (1), p.356-364
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Qiang, Hu, Pan, Li, Qianqian, Zhang, Shasha, Li, Hanxiao, Chang, Jiang, Jiang, Qiujie, Zheng, Yu, Li, Yansong, Liu, Zengshan, Ren, Honglin, Lu, Shiying
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container_title Emerging microbes & infections
container_volume 10
creator Zhao, Qiang
Hu, Pan
Li, Qianqian
Zhang, Shasha
Li, Hanxiao
Chang, Jiang
Jiang, Qiujie
Zheng, Yu
Li, Yansong
Liu, Zengshan
Ren, Honglin
Lu, Shiying
description Listeria monocytogenes is an important foodborne pathogen, and is ubiquitously distributed in the natural environment. Cattle and sheep, as natural hosts, can transmit L. monocytogenes to related meat and dairy products. In this study, the prevalence, distribution, and transmission characteristics of Listeria were analysed by investigating 5214 samples of cattle and sheep in farm and slaughtering environments in China. A low contamination incidence of L. monocytogenes (0.5%, 20/4430) was observed in farm environment, but there was a high contamination incidence in slaughtering environment (9.4%, 74/784). The incidence of L. innocua in cattle and sheep farm and slaughtering environments is more common and significantly higher (9.7%, 508/5214) than that of L. monocytogenes (1.8%, 94/5214). The distinct molecular and genetic characteristics of Listeria by PFGE and MLST indicated that L. monocytogenes and L. innocua were gradually transmitted from the farm and slaughtering environments to end products, such as beef and mutton along the slaughtering chain. The ST7, ST9, ST91, and ST155 found in our study were associated with the human listeriosis cases in China. In addition, the findings of virulence markers (inlC, inlJ, LIPI-3, LIPI-4, and ECIII) concerned with the pathogenesis of human listeriosis and antibiotics resistance of L. monocytogenes in this study implies a potential public health risk. This study fills the gap in the epidemiology of beef cattle and sheep that carry Listeria in farm and slaughtering environments in major cattle and sheep producing areas in China.
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The ST7, ST9, ST91, and ST155 found in our study were associated with the human listeriosis cases in China. In addition, the findings of virulence markers (inlC, inlJ, LIPI-3, LIPI-4, and ECIII) concerned with the pathogenesis of human listeriosis and antibiotics resistance of L. monocytogenes in this study implies a potential public health risk. 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The ST7, ST9, ST91, and ST155 found in our study were associated with the human listeriosis cases in China. In addition, the findings of virulence markers (inlC, inlJ, LIPI-3, LIPI-4, and ECIII) concerned with the pathogenesis of human listeriosis and antibiotics resistance of L. monocytogenes in this study implies a potential public health risk. 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subjects cattle and sheep
farm
Listeria innocua
Listeria monocytogenes
raw milk
slaughtering
transmission characteristics
title Prevalence and transmission characteristics of Listeria species from ruminants in farm and slaughtering environments in China
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