The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes

Food safety is about ensuring that our food is safe to eat. Food quality concerns ensuring that it is nutritious and acceptable. Food safety is the absolute priority. It must be assured to protect the consumer, and to maintain and expand food markets. Like all disease, foodborne illness seems to str...

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Main Author: Abu Bakar, Fatimah
Format: Inaugural Lecture
Language:English
English
Published: Universiti Putra Malaysia Press 2012
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/1/Cover.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/2/The%20good%20the%20bad%20%26%20the%20ugly.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.415902015-12-21T08:36:46Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/ The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes Abu Bakar, Fatimah Food safety is about ensuring that our food is safe to eat. Food quality concerns ensuring that it is nutritious and acceptable. Food safety is the absolute priority. It must be assured to protect the consumer, and to maintain and expand food markets. Like all disease, foodborne illness seems to strike at random. When people are exposed to foodborne microbes, some of them get sick while many others will suffer few or no ill effects. Foodborne diseases are largely preventable, though there is no simple one-step prevention measure like a vaccine. Instead, measures are needed to prevent or limit contamination all the way from the farm to the table. • A variety of good agricultural and manufacturing practices can reduce the spread of microbes among animals and prevent the contamination of foods. • Careful review of the whole food production process can identify the principal hazards, and the control points where contamination can be prevented, limited, or eliminated. • A formal method for evaluating the control of risk in foods exists is called the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point, or HACCP system. This was first developed by NASA to make sure that the food eaten by astronauts was safe. HACCP safety principles are now being applied to an increasing spectrum of foods, including meat, poultry, and seafood. For some particularly risky foods, even the most careful hygiene and sanitation are insufficient to prevent contamination, and a definitive microbe-killing step must be included in the process. The main concern is the safety hazards associated with the poultry and aquaculture food animals especially bacterial pathogens. Currently, the most fail-safe method is to consistently monitor the bacterial level in the food animals from the point immediately after obtaining them to just before it is sold to the consumer. However, this has done very little to reduce food poisoning among consumers, as it is time-consuming and lacks reinforcement in some improvised areas of the world. Therefore, research is ongoing worldwide on finding a way to reduce, if not, remove the hazards present in the food animals, either by prevention (before or during its growth), or production. This publication discusses the importance of food safety. It analyzes issues related to food safety, such as spoilage, food-borne pathogens and the microbiological quality of food including some of the examples of work carried out by our research group. It then discusses the significance of contaminants such as biogenic amines with regards to food safety during handling and storage. Our findings provide significant information regarding histamine degrading bacteria and factors influencing its activity. In addition, the findings also emphasized the effectiveness of using bacteria with amines oxidase activity in reducing histamine accumulation in fermented food products. Lastly, the publication looks at the development of rapid enzyme-based biosensor technology in detecting histamine and formaldehyde in fish and seafoods. Universiti Putra Malaysia Press 2012 Inaugural Lecture NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/1/Cover.pdf application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/2/The%20good%20the%20bad%20%26%20the%20ugly.pdf Abu Bakar, Fatimah (2012) The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes. [Inaugural Lecture]
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
English
description Food safety is about ensuring that our food is safe to eat. Food quality concerns ensuring that it is nutritious and acceptable. Food safety is the absolute priority. It must be assured to protect the consumer, and to maintain and expand food markets. Like all disease, foodborne illness seems to strike at random. When people are exposed to foodborne microbes, some of them get sick while many others will suffer few or no ill effects. Foodborne diseases are largely preventable, though there is no simple one-step prevention measure like a vaccine. Instead, measures are needed to prevent or limit contamination all the way from the farm to the table. • A variety of good agricultural and manufacturing practices can reduce the spread of microbes among animals and prevent the contamination of foods. • Careful review of the whole food production process can identify the principal hazards, and the control points where contamination can be prevented, limited, or eliminated. • A formal method for evaluating the control of risk in foods exists is called the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point, or HACCP system. This was first developed by NASA to make sure that the food eaten by astronauts was safe. HACCP safety principles are now being applied to an increasing spectrum of foods, including meat, poultry, and seafood. For some particularly risky foods, even the most careful hygiene and sanitation are insufficient to prevent contamination, and a definitive microbe-killing step must be included in the process. The main concern is the safety hazards associated with the poultry and aquaculture food animals especially bacterial pathogens. Currently, the most fail-safe method is to consistently monitor the bacterial level in the food animals from the point immediately after obtaining them to just before it is sold to the consumer. However, this has done very little to reduce food poisoning among consumers, as it is time-consuming and lacks reinforcement in some improvised areas of the world. Therefore, research is ongoing worldwide on finding a way to reduce, if not, remove the hazards present in the food animals, either by prevention (before or during its growth), or production. This publication discusses the importance of food safety. It analyzes issues related to food safety, such as spoilage, food-borne pathogens and the microbiological quality of food including some of the examples of work carried out by our research group. It then discusses the significance of contaminants such as biogenic amines with regards to food safety during handling and storage. Our findings provide significant information regarding histamine degrading bacteria and factors influencing its activity. In addition, the findings also emphasized the effectiveness of using bacteria with amines oxidase activity in reducing histamine accumulation in fermented food products. Lastly, the publication looks at the development of rapid enzyme-based biosensor technology in detecting histamine and formaldehyde in fish and seafoods.
format Inaugural Lecture
author Abu Bakar, Fatimah
spellingShingle Abu Bakar, Fatimah
The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
author_facet Abu Bakar, Fatimah
author_sort Abu Bakar, Fatimah
title The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
title_short The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
title_full The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
title_fullStr The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
title_full_unstemmed The good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
title_sort good the bad & ugly of food safety: from molecules to mirobes
publisher Universiti Putra Malaysia Press
publishDate 2012
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/1/Cover.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/2/The%20good%20the%20bad%20%26%20the%20ugly.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/41590/
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