10 research outputs found

    Bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria: purification, properties and use as biopreservatives

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    Microbial metabolites as biological control agents in food safety

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    Ensuring food safety and at the same time meeting such demands for retention of nutrition and quality attributes have resulted in increased interest in alternative preservation techniques for inactivating microorganisms and enzymes in foods. This increasing demand has opened new dimensions for the use of natural preservatives derived from plants, animals, or microflora. Extensive research has investigated the potential application of natural antimicrobial agents in food preservation. Especially the significance and use of microbes as producers of antimicrobial metabolites has increased significantly during the last decades. Reported studies have demonstrated that microbial metabolites from microorganisms exhibited a great numbers of diverse and versatile biological effects about antimicrobial activities. These microorganisms produce many compounds that are active against other microorganisms, which can be harnessed to inhibit the growth of potential spoilage or pathogenic microorganisms. These include fermentation end products (metabolites) such as organic acids, hydrogen peroxide, and diacetyl, biofilm, exopolysaccharides in addition to bacteriocins and other antagonistic compounds such as reuterin. Up to now, antimicrobial metabolites from lactic acid bacteria (such as nisin) have been mostly used in food preservation. In addition to lactic acid bacteria, some yeast, mold, and another bacteria species as well as some pathogenic bacteria can produce antimicrobial metabolites. Antimicrobial metabolites present in foods can extend the shelf life of unprocessed or processed foods by reducing the microbial growth rate or viability. This offers a new knowledge-based approach to the exploitation of bacteria for food production, from metabolic engineering of microorganisms to produce antimicrobials or nutritionals, to the molecular mining of activities as yet unknown but which could benefit food production. In addition, the availability of the genomes of many food pathogenic and spoilage bacteria may open up new possibilities for the design of novel antimicrobials which target essential functions of these problematic bacteria. In this chapter, antimicrobial metabolites from microorganism in food safety as a biocontrol agent reviewed. © 2014, Springer Science+Business Media New York

    Bacteriocinogenic LAB Strains for Fermented Meat Preservation: Perspectives, Challenges, and Limitations

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