Isolation and Identification of Listeria Monocytogenes in Bangalore City from Various Food Samples

The current research emphasis on the isolation and differentiation of Listeria monocytogenes from different food samples most frequently infected with Listeriosis outbreaks. Crude chicken meat, raw milk, pasteurized cheese, ice cream and raw fish are samples from the city of Bangalore. The selective medium mainly used for the isolation of Listeria is oxford agar. Using isolated L. monocytogenes from food samples, morphologic and biochemical identification was carried out. 2 samples (fresh milk and Ice cream) were positive out of 5 samples; 3 samples (raw chicken meat, raw fish, and pasteurized cheese) were negative. The results conferred during this study indicate the contamination of Icecream and Raw Milk samples with L. monocytogenes.

Listeriosis is one among the least food borne disease compared to all other food borne illness. Listeriosis caused by the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes. It is one among the food borne pathogen and Listeriosis is one among the least food borne disease compared to all other food borne illness. Listeriosis caused by the bacteria, L. monocytogenes. It is one among the food borne pathogen and ubiquitous in nature. L. monocytogenes is Gram positive, rod shaped, Catalase positive, non-spore forming, facultative anaerobic, Oxidase negative, motile bacterium. It is widely distributed in water, soil and also present in various animal foods and food products 1 . L. monocytogenes withstand at various temperatures for survival and forms flagella at above 27 °C. It can grow in a pH range from 4.6 to 9.5 and grow in low water activity environments 2 . Foods include unpasteurized dairy products , ready to eat foods , sea foods. It is an opportunistic pathogen for human beings and animals and although mortality rate that reaches 20-40% and incidence of critical sickness is very high 3 . Food is an important vehicle of transmission in 99% of Listeriosis cases. The most affected peoples are immune compromised persons, pregnant women, neonates and children. Listeria is an emerging pathogen during the early 1980s, it's difficult to detect, number of efforts to develop both cultural and rapid methods for its detection. The best choice for Listeriosis detection is Antibiotic therapy. Some of the antibiotics to treat Listeriosis disease are Ampicillin, Gentamicin etc 4 . As a food borne pathogen, is a serious threat for human health and food safety. The consumption of raw food and food products that carry Listeria monocytogenes is a cause of Listeriosis. To control the Listeriosis consumer should follow WHO (World Health organization) rules and regulation for the food safety and healthy life. Consumption of proper cooked food (meat and meat products), proper handling of food, adequate heating and cooling of the food is very important aspects of controlling the food borne pathogen 5 . The aim of this study is to isolate and identifies the L. monocytogenes from food samples & biochemical characterization for further identification.

sample collection
In the present study, samples were collected from Dairy shop, Fish and Chicken markets from different areas in Bangalore city. The samples including the Milk products (Pasteurized Amul cheese, Ice-cream, Raw milk), poultry product (Raw Chicken), sea food (Raw Fish). The samples were suspected to be contaminated with Listeria. The samples were collected in sterile container (Box) under aseptic precautions and also the samples collection box at 4°C and were transported to the laboratory directly 6 . Processing of sample to enrichment media 25 g of samples were taken aseptically and homogenized using sterile mortar and pestle later the crushed sample was inoculated on to 225 ml of enrichment media Fraser Broth (Table 1), Whereas solid sample was inoculated as into Frazer broth and incubated at 37°C for 24 hours 6 .

isolation of the listeria spp
The selective media used for isolation of L. monocytogenes is Oxford agar. The media were ready as per the composition ( Table 2). The culture (1ml) is taken from enrichment medium and streaked on the Oxford agar plates and incubated at 37°C for 48 hours. Colonies formed after incubation, were likely to be L. monocytogenes and that them were sub cultured on to nutrient agar for more identification 6 .

Identification methods
In addition, on the basis of their morphological observation, staining and biochemical characterization, cultures of isolated bacteria (L. monocytogenes) have been classified 7 .

results
The isolation of L. monocytogenes is carried out by using Fraser Broth enrichment as selective enrichment media followed by Oxford agar. Totally few different samples were collected from different places such as super market, vegetable market and food shops from different areas in Bangalore and sample details were represented in Table 3. Oxford agar is a solid medium, mainly used for the selective medium for isolation and identification of L. monocytogenes in food samples. L. monocytogenes hydrolyze the esculin to esculetin. Esculetin reacts with ferric ammonium citrate resulting in a black precipitate and a positive reaction.
Out of five different samples were processed for isolation of sample and only Icecream and Milk samples showed positive results for L. monocytogenes. Several authors observed For isolation of L. monocytogenes from different food samples from Bangalore city, using conventional methods: as per the growth on Oxford agar medium, Gram staining and Catalase test; totally 2 samples (40%) suspected L. monocytogenes were isolated from 5 samples.
Five samples were analyzed for the detection of a pathogenic micro-organism. L. monocytogenes isolated from 2 samples Milk and Ice-cream. The 2 isolates recovered from the samples were known supported the morphological, cultural and biochemical characteristics (table 4). It has been found that about 30 percent of milk products are infected with Listeria. According to our report, ice-cream (15%) samples tainted with L. monocytogenes are raw milk (26%).

discussion
Listeriosis is one of the zoonotic diseases and is contracted principally from the consumption   15 . These findings were comparable to the results of surveys undertaken in other countries [16][17][18][19][20] . This suggests that the presence of a significant public health joined to the consumption of foods contaminated with L. monocytogenes. The overall findings were almost comparable with Gunasena et al., 1995. This study has incontestable the presence of Listeria in several types of raw and prepared to eat food products in Bangalore city. Also suggests the requirement for improved food safety is important aspect of controlling food borne pathogen.

summary
Food from different sources in Bangalore city was collected to analyze for detection of Listeria monocytogenes. Samples were collected with adequate measures and taken to the laboratory for the isolation and identification, biochemical characterization. Totally 5 samples were collected for the identification of Listeria monocytogenes, samples are (raw chicken meat, raw milk, raw cheese, raw fish and Ice-cream samples). Among the 5 samples two samples Ice-cream (15%) and raw milk (25%) was showed positive results for the all biochemical tests. According to researches Listeria monocytogenes were highly contaminated with milk and milk products.

conclusion
Introducing hygiene measures from production to consumption at the lowest level, the current study jointly sets out the criteria for increasing food safety. Listeria monocytogenes can survive extreme environmental conditions and pose a high risk to human health. A large proportion of the food samples were silently infected with L. monocytogenes recommend measures to improve the hygiene, proper handling and cooling storage conditions of the area unit when treating the infection.