PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Salmonella contamination via strawberry roots not a dietary risk factor

Salmonella contamination via strawberry roots not a dietary risk factor
2021-05-12
(Press-News.org) Strawberry production is one of the driving forces in the Spanish agriculture sector, as strawberries are highly valued for their organoleptic characteristics and health benefits. These two factors, their economic relevance, and the value that consumers assign them, make this fruit an object of scientific research from multiple perspectives, including that of food safety. A research project headed by Liliana Pérez-Lavalle, Elena Carrasco, Pedro Vallesquino-Laguna, Manuel Cejudo, Guiomar Denisse Posada and Antonio Valero has aimed to evaluate whether the Salmonella Thompson bacteria, one of the pathogens that can contaminate the fruit through sewage and/or the soil, could penetrate through the roots of strawberry plants (specifically, the 'San Andreas' variety) and reach the fruit.

For the study, several groups of strawberries were subjected to water contaminated with the pathogen at different levels of inoculation. The roots, leaves and fruits were then analysed, finding a very low proportion even in those that had received the greatest amount of contaminated water. In this way it was determined that access from the root to the edible zone is not a significant entry route for the pathogen. It was also determined that drip irrigation is more effective in preventing contamination than sprinkler irrigation, as the former prevents direct contact between the water and fruit, thus tending to avert both product contamination and deterioration. "An excess of humidity in the fruit due to contact with water can cause the proliferation of mould, resulting in rotting", explained the group's researchers.

The reason why the Salmonella bacterium was researched is its high degree of survival in products made from strawberries and its durability, being able to exist in wastewater and soil for periods of more than eight months. It has a great capacity to adapt to different conditions of environmental stress, such as the acidic pH of some fruits.

The research group concluded that there is also a greater possibility of surface contamination of strawberries, which can occur during harvesting, when workers do not comply with the corresponding hygienic measures, or due to the fruit coming into contact with contaminated surfaces. They stress that most strawberries are not washed, in order to prevent deterioration due to mould, which is why it is particularly important that consumers, as the last link in the chain, make sure that they do wash this fruit prior to consumption.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Salmonella contamination via strawberry roots not a dietary risk factor

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Gold leaf could help diagnose viral infections in low-resource settings

Gold leaf could help diagnose viral infections in low-resource settings
2021-05-12
Gold leaf -- gold metal hammered into thin sheets -- is used by artists and crafters to gild picture frames, artwork and clothing. Despite its luxurious appearance, the material is affordable and available at most craft stores. Now, researchers reporting in ACS Central Science have developed gold leaf electrodes that, in combination with a CRISPR-based assay, could sensitively detect human papillomavirus (HPV) DNA in human samples. The method also could be modified to diagnose other viral infections. Previous research indicates that about 80% of new cases of sexually transmitted infections, such as HPV and human immunodeficiency virus (known ...

Earthworms could help reduce antibiotic resistance genes in soil

2021-05-12
Earthworms improve the soil by aerating it, breaking down organic matter and mineralizing nutrients. Now, researchers reporting in ACS' Environmental Science & Technology have dug up another possible role: reducing the number and relative abundance of antibiotic-resistance genes (ARGs) in soils from diverse ecosystems. These results imply that earthworms could be a natural, sustainable solution to addressing the global issue of antibiotic resistance, the researchers say. The overuse of antibiotics in humans and animals has caused ARGs to accumulate in soils, which could contribute to the rise in antibiotic-resistant infections. Earthworms consume tons of soil per year worldwide, and their guts have a unique combination of low-oxygen conditions, neutral pH and native microbial ...

Residential coal use in China results in many premature deaths, models indicate

2021-05-12
Coal combustion by power plants and industry pollutes the air, causing many governments to implement mitigation actions and encourage cleaner forms of energy. Now, a new study in ACS' Environmental Science & Technology indicates that in China, indoor air pollution from residential coal burning causes a disproportionate number of premature deaths from exposure to tiny, inhalable pollutants known as PM2.5. In China, coal is still the largest source of energy, although recent mitigation actions have replaced some coal-fired power plants with petroleum- or natural gas-powered plants. Also, many coal-fired power plants and industrial boilers have installed equipment that reduces ...

Pandemic screen time tops 6 hours a day for some kindergartners

2021-05-12
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Kindergartners from low-income families spent more than six hours a day in front of screens during two early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a small Ohio study suggests. That is nearly double the screen time found before the pandemic in similar children, according to other research. Caregivers from low-income households may have faced more difficulties than those from more advantaged families in managing the time their children spent watching TV and using computers, phones and tablets when child care was shut down, according to the researchers. Still, the results are concerning, said Rebecca Dore, lead author of the study and senior research ...

What does your voice say about you?

What does your voice say about you?
2021-05-12
Everyone has at some point been charmed by the sound of a person's voice: but can we believe our ears? What can a voice really reveal about our character? Now an international research team led by the University of Göttingen has shown that people seem to express at least some aspects of their personality with their voice. The researchers discovered that a lower pitched voice is associated with individuals who are more dominant, extrovert and higher in sociosexuality (more interested in casual sex). The findings were true for women as well as for men. The results were published in the Journal of Research in Personality. The researchers analysed data from over 2,000 participants and included ...

CNIO researchers discover the cause of neuronal death in a large proportion of familial ALS patients

CNIO researchers discover the cause of neuronal death in a large proportion of familial ALS patients
2021-05-12
In Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), the progressive death of neurons that control body movement leads to paralysis of muscles in the limbs and gradually of the whole body, which ultimately makes it impossible to breathe. ALS is currently untreatable, and its cause is unknown. It is known, however, that in 10% of affected individuals there is a strong genetic component, which causes the disease to occur in several members of a single family. In about half of these cases of familial ALS, the origin lies in a gene called C9ORF72. But why do mutations in this gene kill motor neurons? The answer may have been found by the Genomic Instability Group headed by Óscar Fernández-Capetillo at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre (CNIO), who discovered ...

Harnessing the hum of fluorescent lights for more efficient computing

2021-05-12
The property that makes fluorescent lights buzz could power a new generation of more efficient computing devices that store data with magnetic fields, rather than electricity. A team led by University of Michigan researchers has developed a material that's at least twice as "magnetostrictive" and far less costly than other materials in its class. In addition to computing, it could also lead to better magnetic sensors for medical and security devices. Magnetostriction, which causes the buzz of fluorescent lights and electrical transformers, occurs when a material's shape and magnetic field are linked--that is, a change in shape causes a change in magnetic field. The property could be key to a new generation of computing devices called ...

Artificial intelligence tool uses chest X-ray to differentiate worst cases of COVID-19

Artificial intelligence tool uses chest X-ray to differentiate worst cases of COVID-19
2021-05-12
Trained to see patterns by analyzing thousands of chest X-rays, a computer program predicted with up to 80 percent accuracy which COVID-19 patients would develop life-threatening complications within four days, a new study finds. Developed by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the program used several hundred gigabytes of data gleaned from 5,224 chest X-rays taken from 2,943 seriously ill patients infected with SARS-CoV-2, the virus behind the infections. The authors of the study, publishing in the journal npj Digital Medicine online May 12, cited the "pressing need" ...

Ancestors may have created 'iconic' sounds as bridge to first languages

2021-05-12
The 'missing link' that helped our ancestors to begin communicating with each other through language may have been iconic sounds, rather than charades-like gestures - giving rise to the unique human power to coin new words describing the world around us, a new study reveals. It was widely believed that, in order to get the first languages off the ground, our ancestors first needed a way to create novel signals that could be understood by others, relying on visual signs whose form directly resembled the intended meaning. However, an international research team, led by experts from the University of Birmingham and the Leibniz-Centre General Linguistics (ZAS), Berlin, have discovered that iconic ...

Brand new physics of superconducting metals refuted by Lancaster physicists

Brand new physics of superconducting metals refuted by Lancaster physicists
2021-05-12
Lancaster scientists have demonstrated that other physicists' recent "discovery" of the field effect in superconductors is nothing but hot electrons after all. A team of scientists in the Lancaster Physics Department have found new and compelling evidence that the observation of the field effect in superconducting metals by another group can be explained by a simple mechanism involving the injection of the electrons, without the need for novel physics. Dr Sergey Kafanov, who initiated this experiment, said: "Our results unambiguously refute the claim of the electrostatic field effect ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New review highlights histone and non-histone lysine lactylation: From molecular mechanisms to therapeutic frontiers

Boson sampling finds first practical applications in quantum AI

Add a twist to π-molecules! A new design strategy for organic semiconductor materials

Bushfire evacuation simulator wins prestigious US prize

Desert lichen offers new evidence for the possibility of life on other planets

Researchers reveal how brain amplifies perception of pain from multiple sources

The first “SpongeBooster of the Year” award celebrates efforts in wetland restoration

AI innovation at UBC Okanagan helps shipping ports see what’s coming—literally

Autoimmune disease linked to doubling in depression, anxiety, bipolar risks

Emotional demands and confrontation in person-contact roles linked to heightened type 2 diabetes risk

UK annual cost of dog walkers’ hand/wrist injuries estimated to top £23 million

The Lancet: Life-saving childhood vaccination coverage has stalled in recent decades, leaving millions of children at risk for deadly diseases

MD Anderson achieves sixth Magnet designation in recognition of nursing excellence

A unified theory of the mind

UTA powers smarter microgrids with new converter tech

US$53,000 essay competition asks: "How Quantum is Life?"

New combination therapy for rheumatoid arthritis: Targeting M6A methylation pathways

Editorial for the special issue on carbon capture, utilization, and storage

'A more versatile and powerful foundation for future photonic technologies'

World’s soft coral diversity retains signature of an ancient, vanished sea

Scientists use gene editing to correct harmful mitochondrial mutations in human cells

The evolution from reptile-like to upright posture in mammals was highly dynamic and complex

An evolutionary trade-off has limited how fish catch their prey

New viruses discovered in bat kidneys in Yunnan province

Head over heels

Drive to survive: The seemingly impossible reproduction of dogroses hinges on a centromere trick

Association for Molecular Pathology publishes best practice recommendations for clinical HRD testing

Bioplastic breakthrough: Sustainable cooling film could slash building energy use by 20% amid rising global temperatures

New methodology for 3D braiding machine design unveiled

Some cancer cells just won’t commit: Why that might be good news for neuroblastoma cancer patients

[Press-News.org] Salmonella contamination via strawberry roots not a dietary risk factor