Engineered Reporter Phages for Rapid Bioluminescence-Based Detection and Differentiation of Viable<i>Listeria</i>Cells
Susanne Meile, Anne Sarbach, Jiemin Du, Markus Schuppler, Carmen Sáez, Martin J. Loessner, Samuel Kilcher
Abstract
Culture-dependent methods are the gold standard for sensitive and specific detection of pathogenic bacteria within the food production chain. In contrast to molecular approaches, these methods detect viable cells, which is a key advantage for foods generated from heat-inactivated source material. However, culture-based diagnostics are typically much slower than molecular or proteomic strategies. Reporter phage assays combine the best of both worlds and allow for near online assessment of microbial safety because phage replication is extremely fast, highly target specific, and restricted to metabolically active host cells. In addition, reporter phage assays are inexpensive and do not require highly trained personnel, facilitating their on-site implementation. The reporter phages presented in this study not only allow for rapid detection but also enable an early estimation of the potential virulence of Listeria isolates from food production and processing sites.