Publications by authors named "Soria M Cecilia"

Listeria monocytogenes can contaminate refrigerated ready-to-eat foods, such as cheeses. Enterocins, with a strong listericidal effect, constitute a natural alternative to control this pathogen in food. To optimize their antimicrobial action in food matrices, bacteriocins can be immobilised in edible coatings through spray drying technology which allows the large-scale production of microcapsules of bioactive molecules.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • This study reports the discovery of raffinocyclicin, a new circular bacteriocin produced by the raw milk isolate APC 3967, characterized by a molecular mass of 6,092 Da and a specific amino acid composition.
  • Raffinocyclicin exhibits a broad inhibitory spectrum against various bacteria, including important foodborne pathogens, demonstrating low sensitivity to trypsin, which may be due to its circular structure.
  • The genetic analysis reveals a 10-gene cluster responsible for its production, suggesting potential for future application in biopreservation within the food industry by enabling transfer of this bacteriocin-producing capability to other lactic acid bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Listeria monocytogenes is a relevant foodborne pathogen causing invasive listeriosis in humans, a disease with high mortality rates. Its ubiquity and growth characteristics enable this pathogen to survive harsh food processing environments. The addition of bacteriocins, antimicrobial peptides ribosomally synthesized by certain bacteria, appears as a natural alternative to control this pathogen in food.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bacillus cereus is an endospore-forming, Gram-positive bacterium able to cause foodborne diseases. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are known for their ability to synthesize organic acids and bacteriocins, but the potential of these compounds against B. cereus has been scarcely documented in food models.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To detect Salmonella gallinarum or Salmonella pullorum in artificially contaminated poultry feed, 9 culture combinations were compared, including 3 preenrichment/enrichment methods (tryptic soy broth plus ferrous sulfate/tetrathionate Hajna, tryptic soy broth plus ferrous sulfate/selenite cystine broth, and Salmosyst) in combination with 3 selective agars (xylose lysine desoxicholate agar added with tergitol 4, EF-18, and Önöz), respectively. Additionally, a single PCR technique was applied combined with 2 different preenrichment media (tryptic soy broth plus ferrous sulfate and Salmosyst). The specificity and positive predictive value were 1 for all methods.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF