27 research outputs found

    Sourdough bacterial dynamics revealed by metagenomic analysis in Brazil.

    Get PDF
    This study dealt with the influence of the temperature on the bacterial dynamics of two spontaneously fermented wheat sourdoughs, propagated at 21 ± 1 °C (SD1) and 30 ± 1 °C (SD2), during nine backslopping steps (BS1 to BS9). Proteobacteria was the only phylum found in flour. Escherichia hermannii was predominant, followed by Kosakonia cowanii, besides species belonging to the genera Pantoea and Pseudomonas. After one step of propagation, Clostridium and Bacillus cereus group became predominant. Lactobacillus curvatus was found at low relative abundance. For the second backslopping step, Clostridium was flanked by L. curvatus and Lactobacillus farciminis. From BS4 (6th day) onward, lactic acid bacteria (LAB) became predominant. L. farciminis overcame L. curvatus and remained dominant until the end of propagations for both sourdoughs. At 21 °C, Bacillus, Clostridium, Pseudomonas, and Enterobacteriaceae were gradually inhibited. At the end of propagation, SD1 harbored only LAB. Otherwise, the temperature of 30 °C favored the persistence of atypical bacteria in SD2, as Pseudomonas and Enterobacteriaceae. Therefore, the temperature of 21 °C was more suitable for sourdough propagation in Brazil. This study enhanced the knowledge of temperature's influence on microbial assembly and contributed to the elucidation of sourdough microbial communities in Brazil

    Recovery and differentiation of long ripened cheese microflora through a new cheese based cultural medium

    No full text
    A partial picture of the typical microflora of PDO Parmigiano Reggiano cheese was achieved by studying the cultivability of lactic acid bacteria associated with its manufacturing and ripening. A comprehensive sampling design allowed for the analysis of the cheese microflora during its production over 20 months of ripening. An innovative cheese agar medium (CAM) was prepared after testing 18 formulations all based on grated Parmigiano Reggiano ripened cheese. During cheese manufacturing and ripening, different samples were sampled and their microflora was recovered using CAM in comparison with other traditional media. Colonies which formed units from the different agar media tested were picked and isolated; the phylogenetic positions of 154 isolated strains were studied at level of species by 16S-rRNA gene sequencing. CAM seems to be able to recover the minority population coming from milk and whey starter, hardly estimable, during the first hours of production, on traditional media

    The occurrence of ochratoxin A in blue cheese

    No full text
    Evidence for the occurrence of ochratoxin A in blue cheeses is reported for the first time. The development of an accurate and reliable procedure for the extraction of OTA from cheese, as well as the availability of a new sensitive HPLC-FLD method, has allowed us to determine ochratoxin A in complex matrices such as cheeses, even at very low levels (LOD in cheese: 0.02 μg/kg). A good linearity for the OTA concentration, between 0.2 and 2.5 μg/kg, was obtained and no matrix effect was observed in the same concentration range. The mean recovery for OTA was 97%, while the average RSD was 3%, within a spiking range of 0.5– 2.0 μg/kg. Although the OTA contamination levels found in blue cheeses were very low, occurrence of ochratoxin A in such products opens a new issue for risk assessment and quality control, as far as finding the origin of the OTA contamination and ways to prevent it
    corecore