
North American
meat sector target of Listeria technology
Source of
Article: http://www.foodproductiondaily.com/Quality-Safety/North-American-meat-sector-target-of-Listeria-technology By Jane Byrne, 14-Apr-2009
Netherlands based company, EBI Food
Safety, has announced that it has teamed up with US distributor World
Technology Ingredients (WTI) to accelerate the penetration of its GRAS
approved phage based product, Listex, into the North American meat and
poultry sector.
Dirk de Meester, business development director at EBI, said that
Listex received Generally Recognised as Safe (GRAS) approval by the US Food
and Drug Administration (FDA) in 2006 for its use with cheese and was
subsequently awarded GRAS affirmation in 2007 for use with all products that
are susceptible to Listeria including hams, hot dogs, fish and
ready-to-eat products. He told FoodProductionDaily.com that as WTI has long standing
relationships with North American meat and poultry processors as well as
comprehensive technical expertise in the control of food pathogens, it is
ideally placed to explain the benefits of Listex in this geography. According to de Meester, Listex kills rather than inhibits the
pathogen and in doing so does not affect the organolepetic properties of the
food such as taste, texture, odour or colour, thus eliminating any
requirement for the trade off between food safety
and quality commonly associated with other methods of pathogen reduction. He said that the phage
based product is easy to apply, through spraying or submersion, and is used
on meat products such as hot dogs after the post-lethality step; he said it
is also recommended for use with fish after the filleting stage to prevent Listeria
getting a hold. Recall prevention With the increasing emphasis by consumers and regulators on food
safety, and the prospect of costly recalls, fines and brand damage,
processors are constantly on the lookout for quicker and cheaper ways of
preventing bacterial contamination of their products. Canada’s outbreak of listeriosis last summer, which was linked to the
deaths of 20 people, was traced to meats producer Maple Leaf’s plant near
Toronto. According to an analysis by Frost & Sullivan, phage technology is
poised to become a food industry standard for ensuring products do not leave
processing plants laden with dangerous pathogens. Bacteriophages Bacteriophages are natural micro organisms, but have been harnessed
only recently for use to enhance food safety. To food pathogens like Listeria, bacteriophages are the viral
hit squads of the microscopic world. They are viruses that target bacteria,
rather than human, plant or animal cells. For every bacterium, there is a phage that likes to latch on to them,
take over their life processes and multiply. The baby phages then burst out
to attack other nearby targets, killing the host cell. EB is also in the process of developing phages against pathogens such
as Salmonella and Campylobacter, added de Meester. |
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