Abstract

The Salmonella enterotoxin (stn) gene exhibits high homology among S. enterica serovars and S. bongori. A set of 6 specific primers targeting the stn gene were designed for detection of Salmonella spp. using the loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) method. The primers amplified target sequences in all 102 strains of 87 serovars of Salmonella tested and no products were detected in 57 non-Salmonella strains. The detection limit in pure cultures was 5 fg DNA/reaction when amplified at 65°C for 25 min. The LAMP assay could detect Salmonella in artificially contaminated food samples as low as 220 cells/g of food without a preenrichment step. However, the sensitivity was increased 100-fold (~2 cells/g) following 5 hr preenrichment at 35°C. The LAMP technique, with a preenrichment step for 5 and 16 hr, was shown to give 100% specificity with food samples compared to the reference culture method in which 67 out of 90 food samples gave positive results. Different food matrixes did not interfere with LAMP detection which employed a simple boiling method for DNA template preparation. The results indicate that the LAMP method, targeting the stn gene, has great potential for detection of Salmonella in food samples with both high specificity and high sensitivity.

1. Introduction

Salmonella remains a leading cause of food poisoning in humans and is also a major foodborne pathogen worldwide [1, 2]. The genus Salmonella is a member of the Enterobacteriaceae family and is divided into two species, S. enterica and S. bongori. More than 2500 serovars of Salmonella, mostly in the species of enterica, have been reported [3, 4]. Salmonella is usually transmitted to humans through consumption of contaminated food. Most often contaminated food is of animal origin (such as eggs, beef, poultry, and milk) but can also include water and vegetables [5, 6]. Due to the health risk and economic impacts of foodborne illness associated with Salmonella, more rapid methods with high sensitivity and specificity for Salmonella detection are still required.

The conventional microbiological method for the detection and identification of Salmonella in food samples requires multiple subculture steps, followed by biochemical and serological confirmation tests. This method is time consuming and labor intensive and typically requires 5 to 7 days depending on the biochemical test and serological confirmation utilized [7, 8]. Various molecular-based methods have been used to detect Salmonella and other pathogens due to their sensitivity and ability for rapid detection. Among these methods, PCR has been successfully established as a valuable method which offers the rapid, sensitive, and specific detection of the selected genes in various pathogens such as Escherichia coli O157:H7, Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., and Shigella spp. [7, 8]. Detection of a number of foodborne pathogens, such as L. monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., and Shigella spp., has utilized real-time PCR allowing for the rapid analysis of samples [911]. Despite these advantages, PCR methods require complicated procedures and expensive equipment, such as thermocyclers and electrophoresis units, which are not suitable for use in field conditions.

Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) is a recently developed technique that shows promise for use under conditions in which standard laboratory equipment is not available. Advantages of the LAMP technique include ease of operation, a high degree of specificity, and rapid and simple procedures compared to PCR methods. Detection of LAMP products is also suitable to field conditions as gel electrophoresis is not required [12]. The LAMP method produces large amounts of pyrophosphate, a by-product of DNA amplification, which can easily be detected by monitoring turbidity or fluorescence [1315]. In addition, the presence of nontarget DNA and inhibitors in the LAMP reaction has been shown to not affect the amplification results [13]. This powerful technique with reduced rates of false positives and inhibition should be a viable tool for the detection of specific pathogens in food samples, since high amounts of nontarget DNA from many food ingredients as well as several inhibitors are usually present.

The aim of this study is to develop a LAMP assay that can be applied to the Salmonella enterotoxin (stn) gene for the detection of Salmonella in food samples. The simple method of DNA preparation from food samples and the sensitivity and the specificity of LAMP detection procedure were also described.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Bacterial Strains and Culture Conditions

One hundred and fifty-nine strains, including 102 strains (87 serovars) of Salmonella enterica and 57 non-Salmonella strains in the family Enterobacteriaceae, were obtained from World Health Organization National Salmonella and Shigella Center, National Institute of Health, Department of Medical Sciences, Ministry of Public Health, Nonthaburi, Thailand. All strains are listed in Supplementary Table S1 in Supplementary material, available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/356401. Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium ATCC 23566 was used as the reference strain. All of bacterial cultures were stored in 15% (v/v) glycerol at −80°C. For cultivation, Salmonella spp. were subcultured on xylose lysine deoxycholate agar medium (XLD; Merck). Non-Salmonella bacterial strains were subcultured on Luria-Bertani agar (LA) plate (10 g tryptone; 5 g yeast extract; 10 g NaCl; 15 g agar; and H2O to 1000 mL) and incubated at 37°C overnight.

2.2. Sequence Comparison of the stn Gene

The stn gene sequences from Salmonella and non-Salmonella species of the Enterobacteriaceae family were obtained from the GenBank database. Pairwise sequence comparisons were performed using the EMBOSS Needle tool program (EMBL-EBI). Sequences were aligned using the MUSCLE multisequence alignment program. Phylogenetic relationships and evolutionary history were inferred from this alignment using the MEGA5 software program and the Neighbor-Joining method, respectively. The bootstrap consensus tree from 2000 replicates was taken to represent the evolutionary history of the taxa analyzed.

2.3. Primer Design for LAMP

A set of four primers comprising two inner primers (FIP and BIP) and two outer primers (F3 and B3) that recognize six distinct sequences within the Salmonella enterotoxin (stn) gene of Salmonella Typhimurium (GenBank Accession Number L16014) were designed. To compare amplification efficiency, loop primers, LF and LB (between the F1/F2 region and B1/B2 region, resp.), were also designed to check their role in increasing the sensitivity of detection. A set of LAMP primers was designed using the PrimerExplorer V4, LAMP primer design program (http://primerexplorer.jp/e/index.html). The designed primers were compared with the NCBI sequence database to confirm the specificity of the primers. The nucleotide sequences and annealing portions of each primer are shown in Table 1 and Supplementary Figure S1, respectively.

2.4. LAMP Reaction and LAMP Product Detection

The LAMP reaction was performed in a total volume of 25 μL containing the following components (final concentration): 1.6 μM each of FIP and BIP primers, 0.2 μM each of F3 and B3 primers, 0.8 μM each of LF and LB primers (in the same LAMP reaction), 1.6 mM of deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate mixture (dNTPs), 1 M betaine (Sigma, B2629, St. Louis, USA), 6 mM MgSO4, 1x thermopol buffer (New England Biolabs, B9004S, Beverly, USA), 1 μL (8 U) of Bst DNA polymerase large fragment (New England Biolabs, M0275S, Beverly, USA), and 5 μL of DNA template solution. The reaction temperature was optimized by incubating the reaction mixture under isothermal conditions between 60 and 70°C for 60 min. The reaction time was optimized by varying the time in each reaction from 10 to 60 min, at 5 min intervals in each condition at the optimal temperature (65°C). The reaction was terminated by heating at 80°C for 5 min. S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 cells or its isolated DNA (1 ng/reaction) was used as positive controls. LF and LB primers were added to determine if these primers increased amplification efficacy. For analysis of the LAMP products, the turbidity resulting from the white precipitate of magnesium pyrophosphate in the mixture was observed by eye and confirmed by monitoring the formation of a green color under normal light following addition of SYBR green. The negative reaction was orange in color. LAMP products (2.5 μL) were also analyzed by electrophoresis using 2% agarose gel, stained with ethidium bromide, and visualized using a UV transilluminator.

2.5. DNA Template Preparation and Sensitivity of LAMP Detection

DNA template for all bacterial strains was prepared using the boiling method [16]. Salmonella DNA templates were prepared from 1.5 mL of overnight cultures grown in lactose broth incubated at 37°C. Cells were harvested and washed twice and then resuspended in 100 μL of TE buffer. Lysis was performed by boiling at 100°C for 10 min, and supernatant was collected. Non-Salmonella strains were grown in LB broth and DNA templates were prepared as described above. To determine the minimum DNA concentration required for the LAMP reaction template DNA from S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 was prepared following the total DNA isolation procedure as described by Wilson [17]. Genomic DNA at 15.625 pg, 3.125 pg, 625 fg, 125 fg, 25 fg, 5 fg, and 1 fg DNA/reaction was used as DNA templates in a total volume of 25 μL. To determine the minimal cell number, S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 was cultured in lactose broth and incubated at 37°C overnight (16 hr), then subcultured (1% inoculum) in freshly prepared lactose broth, and further incubated at 35°C for 5 hr with shaking. LAMP assays were performed using cell numbers ranging from 0 to 1000 cells/reaction and DNA template was prepared by the boiling method as described above. The numbers of cells were monitored by the plate count technique on XLD agar plate after incubation at 37°C for 48 hr.

2.6. Salmonella Detection in Artificially Contaminated Food

A single colony of S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 was picked from XLD agar plate and was inoculated into lactose broth and incubated at 37°C overnight (16 hr). The number of viable cells was obtained using the plate count technique on XLD agar plate with incubation at 37°C for 48 hr. The plate count was performed in triplicate. Minced pork meat was decontaminated by autoclaving at 121°C for use as a sterile food sample [18]. The autoclaved food sample (25 g in 225 mL of lactose broth) was artificially contaminated by spiking with 1000 μL of appropriate dilutions of S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 to achieve 5.5 × 106–55 cells/25 g of food sample. The inoculated food sample was then mixed with 225 mL lactose broth and enriched at 35°C for 5 hr. 1.5 mL of inoculated food sample was taken out at 0 and 5 hr time points and stood without shaking for 5 min to allow particulate matter to settle. One mL of the upper portion was collected and centrifuged for 5 min at 10000 rpm. The pellet was washed twice with 500 μL of TE buffer and resuspended in 100 μL of TE buffer. DNA was extracted using the simple boiling method as described above. The supernatant (5 μL) was also directly used as the DNA template for LAMP amplification. These experiments were performed in triplicate. Autoclaved minced pork meat without Salmonella inoculation was included in every experiment as a negative control.

2.7. Detection of Salmonella in Naturally Contaminated Food

To determine the validity and reliability of LAMP detection of the stn gene for Salmonella identification in food samples a comparative study between LAMP and the reference culture method was performed. Various kinds of foods with possible naturally occurring Salmonella contamination were investigated. A total of 90 food samples, 30 each of minced pork meat, chicken meat, and fresh vegetables, were purchased randomly in a local market in Bangkok. All food samples were transported to the laboratory in an ice box and were examined immediately after purchase. Each food sample (25 g) was homogenized in 225 mL of lactose broth. The mixture was incubated at 35°C and 1.5 mL was collected for DNA extraction after 5 and 16 hr of incubation. DNA was then prepared from food samples for use in LAMP detection. The reference culture method was performed in parallel as described in the Bacteriological Analytical Manual (BAM 8th Edition) [19]. The performance indicators for qualitative methods and efficacy of LAMP method in comparison with the reference culture method for Salmonella detection in food samples were calculated using the method of Galen [20].

3. Results

3.1. stn Gene Sequence Data Analysis

A total of 77 putative stn whole gene sequences from Enterobacteriaceae strains were collected from GenBank. Similarities of stn among various genera are listed in Table 2. The nucleotide sequence of stn among 16 Salmonella enterica strains shows 96.9–100% homology. Only one stn gene sequence for S. bongori was available which exhibited 83.8–84.7% homology to the 16 stn sequences from S. enterica (Table 2). The stn sequence from Salmonella exhibited 57.0% to 74.0% sequence homology to stn genes from other genera, with the highest homology to that of Citrobacter at 73.2% to 74.0%. The phylogenetic relationships of stn from 12 serovars, 17 strains (16 for S. enterica and one for S. bongori) in the genus Salmonella with other genera in the family Enterobacteriaceae were determined. The dendrograms inferred from the stn sequence alignment using the Neighbor-Joining method (Supplementary Figure S2) and Maximum Likelihood method yielded similar topologies in which Salmonella formed individual clusters. The toxin gene of S. aureus was used as the out group. The data suggested that the stn gene should provide a genus-specific target sequence for detection of Salmonella.

3.2. Optimal Condition for the LAMP

The optimal temperature for LAMP assay was determined by varying the temperature between 60 and 70°C for 60 min in 1°C increments using purified DNA template. The LAMP products amplified between 64 and 66°C showed clear and distinct DNA bands with higher density compared to other samples. Therefore, 65°C was set as an optimal temperature. Reaction times, 5–60 min at 5 min intervals, were analyzed with the reaction temperature at 65°C using 0.8 μM each of LF and LB loop primers. LAMP products were detected as early at 15 min (Supplementary Figure S3(B), lane 3) but the clear and intense bands were observed at 20 min (Supplementary Figure S3(B), lane 4). In the absence of loop primers clear and dense bands were observed after 35 min (Supplementary Figure S3(A), lane 7). Therefore, the optimal condition for the stn LAMP assay was set at 65°C for 25 min with 0.8 μM each of loop primers, 1.6 μM each of FIP and BIP primers, and 0.2 μM each of outer primers. The effect of various LAMP reagent concentrations (MgCl2, dNTPs, betaine, and Bst DNA polymerase) was also studied (data not shown). The optimal conditions for the highest sensitivity for Salmonella stn gene detection using LAMP are summarized in Table 3.

3.3. Specificity of LAMP

The results for the specificity test of the stn LAMP assay are shown in Supplementary Table S1. In this analysis all of 102 strains of 87 serovars of Salmonella gave positive results. In contrast, the 57 non-Salmonella strains in family Enterobacteriaceae including 6 strains of Citrobacter examined by LAMP were negative. Product formation in the LAMP assays was monitored by observing the presence of white turbidity and by observing green color following addition of SYBR green in the reaction mixture. The presence of amplified products was also confirmed using gel electrophoresis with 2% agarose gels. No amplified products were observed in LAMP reactions lacking Salmonella DNA demonstrating that amplification of the stn gene was highly specific for Salmonella detection. Examples of LAMP assays using DNA template from some Salmonella serovars and other enteric bacteria are shown in Supplementary Figure S4.

3.4. Sensitivity of Detection

Analysis using purified DNA prepared from S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 revealed that the lowest DNA concentration that could promote stn amplification by LAMP (at 65°C, 25 min with loop primers) was 5 fg DNA/25 μL reaction (Supplementary Figure S5(A)). Similar analysis using DNA prepared from whole cells by boiling method indicates that a minimum of 1 cell/reaction was sufficient to give a positive result with the stn LAMP assay under these conditions (Supplementary Figure S5(B)).

3.5. Detection of Salmonella in Artificially and Naturally Contaminated Food Samples

All six samples of autoclaved minced pork meat (25 g) in 225 mL of lactose broth inoculated with 5.5 × 106–55 cells of S. Typhimurium ATCC 23566 gave positive result. In contrast, uninoculated meat samples were negative. The detection limit of Salmonella in artificially contaminated food using the LAMP assay was 5.5 × 103 cells/250 mL (220 cells/g of food sample) without an enrichment step (at 0 hr), as shown in Table 4. The sensitivity increased to 55 cells/250 mL (2 cells/g of food sample) after incubation of the inoculated food sample for 5 hr at 35°C prior to LAMP analysis (Table 4). A total of 90 food samples were analyzed using both the reference culture method according to BAM and the LAMP method. This analysis used 30 samples each of minced pork meat, chicken meat, and fresh vegetables enriched for either 5 or 16 hr. The results (data not shown) indicated that 67 samples were positive and 23 samples were negative by both methods after enrichment for 5 hr. The meat samples gave higher positive results (28 and 25 for minced pork meat and chicken meat, resp.) than those of fresh vegetable (14 out of 30 samples) (data not shown). Preenrichment times of 5 hr and 16 hr gave similar results (data not shown). The overall relative diagnostic specificity and accuracy were judged to be 100% as no false-negative or false-positive results were obtained from the LAMP assay compared to the culture method.

4. Discussion

The LAMP method has been utilized to efficiently detect several foodborne pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus [21], Bacillus cereus [22], Vibrio vulnificus [23], and Salmonella. Previous reports for LAMP detection of Salmonella utilized several gene targets including invA [14, 16, 24, 25], phoP [15], Sdf I [12], and IS200/IS1351 [26]. More recently, a fimY-based LAMP assay has been used to detect 80 Salmonella strains of 24 serovars [27]. In our study, we targeted the stn (Salmonella enterotoxin gene) which is widely distributed among Salmonella serovars and has been identified in all 95 strains of Salmonella [28]. The stn gene exhibits high nucleotide sequence homology among Salmonella strains but low homology to the corresponding gene among other closely related enteric bacteria. It has also been reported that stn gene amplification can be effectively used to specifically detect 52 strains of S. enterica and 2 strains of S. bongori without cross-reacting with several common intestinal strains [29]. Based on our results and previous findings it can be established that stn is a suitable target gene for direct detection of Salmonella in biological samples.

The stn gene from S. enterica encodes a protein of approximately 29 kDa, utilizing a TTG start codon, and contains a portion of the conserved motif found in other protein toxins with ADP ribosylation activity [30]. The results of LAMP assay using the stn gene in our study confirmed that it was an appropriate target to specifically detect Salmonella strains without cross-reaction with other closely related enteric bacteria from a complex matrix, such as food samples. We did not include S. bongori in our analysis; however, S. bongori displays 88% sequence identity with S. enterica stn. Primers targeting the stn gene efficiently amplify both S. enterica and S. bongori in real-time PCR [31] and PCR [29] analysis, suggesting that the LAMP procedure should also be applicable for detection of S. bongori. The available stn gene sequences of Enterobacter and Citrobacter strains in GenBank database, respectively, showed 66.9–67.8% and 73.2–74.0% similarity with stn gene sequence from 16 Salmonella strains. However, when 5 strains of Enterobacter and 6 strains of Citrobacter were used in the stn LAMP test with Salmonella specific primers, no positive results were detected. The lack of false-positive results with non-Salmonella strains suggests that stn can be utilized as specific target gene for Salmonella detection.

The presence of loop primers in reaction mixtures reduced the time required for amplification of stn gene to 25 min and provided high sensitivity, allowing the detection of only one Salmonella cell in artificially contaminated food samples. The LAMP assay targeting invA gene (also with loop primers) can detect pure culture of Salmonella at 2.8 cells/reaction tube [14]. In other studies, the LAMP method targeting phoP gene for detecting Salmonella in 20 hr preenrichment food samples shows the lowest limit of detection at 35 cells/reaction tube. Hence, our optimized LAMP method targeting stn gene provided more sensitive detection limit compared to invA and phoP genes. The gene sequence similarities of phoP [15] between different genera of enteric bacteria compared to Salmonella are quite high at 70.8–85.9%, whereas, for stn, sequence similarities among these bacteria were only 57.6–73.9% (Table 4). In both studies on phoP and stn, Citrobacter is the genus most similar to Salmonella, showing 85.6–85.9% and 73.9% homology for phoP and stn genes, respectively. The low sequence similarity of stn genes among other enteric bacteria compared to Salmonella may provide more specific detection of Salmonella in different kinds of food samples in which various enteric bacteria are simultaneously present. Therefore, these assay conditions targeting the stn gene constitute a valuable procedure for the rapid detection of Salmonella in food samples.

5. Conclusion

Salmonella enterotoxin (stn) gene is highly conserved among S. enterica serovars and S. bongori [28, 29, 3133]. The six primers designed from stn gene could specifically detect 87 serovars of S. enterica (102 strains) without cross-reacting with 57 non-Salmonella strains, including C. diversus (3 strains) and C. freundii (3 strains).

The stn amplification using the LAMP procedure was shown to be highly accurate for detection of Salmonella in various food matrices without cross-reacting with other contaminated bacteria in the food samples, even from other closely related enteric bacteria. This LAMP assay using stn as a target gene has the potential as a rapid method for detection of Salmonella with high sensitivity and specificity and could be used as a method of choice in diagnostic food laboratories.

Conflict of Interests

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this paper.

Acknowledgments

The authors are thankful to Mrs. Aroon Bangtragulnonth and Dr. Chaiwat Pulsrikarn, WHO National Salmonella and Shigella Center, National Institute of Health, Department of Medical Sciences, Ministry of Public Health, Nonthaburi, Thailand, for providing 87 serovars of 102 Salmonella strains and 57 non-Salmonella enteric bacteria. The authors thank Dr. Laran T. Jensen, Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Science, Mahidol University, for the critical editing of this paper.

Supplementary Materials

The supplementary materials include 1 Table and 5 Figures. Table S1 describes the name list of specificity test for stn detection by LAMP of 102 and 57 strains of Salmonella and non-Salmonella bacteria. The 5 Supplementary Figures show the nucleotide sequence of stn and primers annealing sites (Figure S1), Phylogenetic tree of stn sequences of various bacterial strains of the family Enterobacteriaceae (Figure S2). In Figures S3, S4 and S5 show electrophoresis patterns of LAMP amplified products with and without loop primers, specificity for stn among various strains of Enterobacteriaceae and sensitivity of stn LAMP assays using purified DNA or DNA from boiled cells, respectively.

  1. Supplementary Material