Mary Anne Amalaradjou, Ph.D.

Assistant Professor University of Connecticut

  • Storrs CT

Mary Anne Amalaradjou is a microbiologist with laboratory work focused on food safety and gut health

Contact

University of Connecticut

View more experts managed by University of Connecticut

Biography

Dr. Amalaradjou's research primarily focuses on food safety and gut health. Specifically, her research is targeted toward understanding pathogen survival and persistence along the food chain, their virulence attributes, and the application of probiotics to control foodborne pathogens. She also studies the efficacy of currently applied intervention (hurdle) technologies to reduce pathogen transmission during pre- and post-harvest processing of fresh produce, meat, and dairy products. Beyond controlling pathogens in food systems, her research also investigates the potential application of probiotics and functional foods in the prevention and treatment of gut pathologies.

Through all aspects of her research, Dr. Amalaradjou's main objective is to improve food safety and promote public health. Her research program is funded by intramural (UConn Research Excellence Program and Storrs Agricultural Experimental Stations- USDA NIFA HATCH) and extramural funding agencies including the Center for Produce Safety, USDA, NSF, and the Foundation for Food and Agriculture.

Areas of Expertise

Inflammation
Microbiome
Gut Health
Probiotics
Food Safety
Virulence
Diet
Pathogens

Education

University of Connecticut

Ph.D.

Animal Science

2010

Area of Concentration: Food Microbiology

University of Connecticut

M.S.

Animal Science

2009

Indian Veterinary Research Institute

M.S.

Animal Biochemistry

2004

Show All +

Accomplishments

2016 FFAR New Innovator Award Winner

New Innovator in Nutrition and Healthy Food Choices - Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research 2016

Media Appearances

Here’s How Long Shelf-Stable Pantry Items Actually Last

Self  online

2023-02-24

“[The date] can help the consumer know the time limit to purchase the product or use by for its peak quality,” Mary Anne Amalaradjou, PhD, an associate professor of food microbiology at the University of Connecticut, tells SELF. After that date passes, she says, an unopened product should still be safe to consume if stored and handled properly—it just might not taste as good as it did within the date’s time frame. Once you open the package, it’s a different story: The life span of many ingredients falls drastically, sometimes to just a few days.

View More

Peaches Recalled Nationwide After 101 Sickened, 17 Hospitalized Across North America

iGrow  online

2020-08-25

There are numerous points along any supply chain where fruits and vegetables can be infected with illness-causing bacteria. This can happen anywhere from farm fields, where animal feces can spread disease to produce; to processing plants that fail to properly sanitize equipment; to one’s own home, where raw meat or eggs can cross-contaminate with other groceries, said Mary Anne Amalaradjou, an associate professor of food microbiology at the University of Connecticut

“All of these factors can play a role in how salmonella can get into food and how it gets into us,” she said. In the past, Amalardjou has studied this particular outbreak strain and its ability to survive in mangos, finding that Salmonella Enteritidis can stay alive inside fruit for multiple days, and can remain on surfaces even after washing.

View More

Cinnamon for Urinary Tract Infections

Live Strong  online

2018-11-28

A 2010 study in the "Journal of Urology" looked at trans-cinnamaldehyde as a possible antibacterial agent against hospital urinary catheter infections. The bacteria most responsible to urinary tract infections, E. coli, was the infective agent used for the laboratory test. According to lead author Mary Anne Amalaradjou, graduate student in the Department of Animal Science at the University of Connecticut, cinnamaldehyde prevented the growth of E. coli and had no toxic effects on bladder cells. A 1996 study reported in the "American Journal of Chinese Medicine" conducted by the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center at Brooklyn tested cinnamon against fluconazole-resistant candida...

View More

Show All +

Research Grants

Early and sustained application of probiotics to promote growth, gut microbiome establishment and intestinal function in broiler chicken

USDA SAES Capacity Grant

2018-2021
PD

NE1442: Poultry production systems and well-being: sustainability for tomorrow

USDA SAES Multistate Research Project

2018-2019
Co-PD

Improving the microbiological safety of sprouts

USDA-NIFA

2017-2020
PD

Show All +

Articles

Oral supplementation of trans‐cinnamaldehyde reduces uropathogenic Escherichia coli colonization in a mouse model

Letters in Applied Microbiology

2017

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) in the United States result in more than 7 million hospital visits per year. Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) is responsible for more than 80% of UTIs. Although antibiotics are the drug of choice to control UTIs, their repeated use has resulted in the emergence of antibiotic‐resistant UPEC. Thus, there is a need for effective alternate strategies to control UPEC infections. This study investigated the efficacy of trans‐cinnamaldehyde (TC), a food‐grade molecule present in cinnamon, in reducing UPEC colonization and pathogenesis in the lower UTI. Female C57BL/6 mice (6–8 weeks old) were fed ad libitum with 0, 0·1, 0·2 and 0·4% TC containing mouse chow for 10 days. Following TC supplementation, animals were experimentally infected with UPEC by transurethral catheterization. Mice were euthanized on days 1, 2 and 4 postinfection, and the bladder, urethra and urine were collected for bacterial enumeration. Prophylactic TC supplementation significantly (P ≤ 0·05) reduced UPEC colonization in the urinary bladder and urethra compared to the control. Results indicate that TC could potentially be used as an oral supplement to control UPEC‐associated lower UTIs, however, follow‐up clinical trials are warranted.

View more

Chapter One - Antivirulence Properties of Probiotics in Combating Microbial Pathogenesis

Advances in Applied Microbiology

2017
Probiotics are nonpathogenic microorganisms that confer a health benefit on the host when administered in adequate amounts. Ample evidence is documented to support the potential application of probiotics for the prevention and treatment of infections. Health benefits of probiotics include prevention of diarrhea, including antibiotic-associated diarrhea and traveler's diarrhea, atopic eczema, dental carries, colorectal cancers, and treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. The cumulative body of scientific evidence that demonstrates the beneficial effects of probiotics on health and disease prevention has made probiotics increasingly important as a part of human nutrition and led to a surge in the demand for probiotics in clinical applications and as functional foods.

View more

Controlling the Graphene–Bio Interface: Dispersions in Animal Sera for Enhanced Stability and Reduced Toxicity

American Chemical Society

2017

Liquid phase exfoliation of graphite in six different animal sera and evaluation of its toxicity are reported here. Previously, we reported the exfoliation of graphene using proteins, and here we extend this approach to complex animal fluids. A kitchen blender with a high-turbulence flow gave high quality and maximum exfoliation efficiency in all sera tested, when compared to the values found with shear and ultrasonication methods. Raman spectra and electron microscopy confirmed the formation of three- or four-layer, submicrometer size graphene, independent of the serum used. Graphene prepared in serum was directly transferred to cell culture media without post-treatments. Contrary to many reports, a nanotoxicity study of this graphene fully dispersed to human embryonic kidney cells, human lung cancer cells, and nematodes.

View more

Show All +