AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study examines the microbial diversity of bacteria and fungi in a type of table olive with a short shelf-life, focusing on changes throughout its 260-day shelf-life using metataxonomic methods.
  • - It found that lactic acid bacteria and mesophilic aerobic populations increased significantly over time, while yeast and mold populations decreased, indicating distinct microbial dynamics.
  • - The analysis revealed low microbial diversity with no food-borne pathogens detected, suggesting a strong level of food safety, which could inform future strategies for managing microbial populations in similar fermented foods.

Article Abstract

is a table olive especially characterised by its natural freshness and short shelf-life. In this work, we applied a metataxonomic approach to unravel the microbial diversity of bacterial and fungi populations through the shelf-life of traditionally packed . A significant increase in lactic acid bacteria and mesophilic aerobic populations was observed during shelf-life, reaching the maximum population levels (4-5 log CFU) at the end of the study (260 days). On the contrary, a rapid reduction in yeast and mould populations was reported. The use of a metataxonomic analysis based on the amplification of 16S (bacteria) and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) region (fungi) regions revealed a low diversity for both microbial groups. (65.05 ± 8.65% in brine vs. 58.70 ± 15.70% in fruit), (28.17 ± 7.36% in brine vs. 27.20 ± 15.95% in fruit), and (4.64 ± 1.08% in brine vs. 11.82 ± 18.17% in fruit) were the main genera found among bacteria, and an increase in and a reduction in populations during the shelf-life were observed. On the other hand, was the dominant fungi genus (54.11 ± 2.00% in brine vs. 50.91 ± 16.14% in fruit), followed by (8.80 ± 2.57% in brine vs. 12.32 ± 8.61% in fruit) and (6.48 ± 1.87% vs. 8.48 ± 4.43% in fruit). No food-borne pathogen genera were detected in any of the samples analysed, indicating the high level of food safety found in this ready-to-eat fermented vegetable. Data obtained in this work will help in the design of new strategies for the control of microbial populations during the shelf-life of .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000080PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9030561DOI Listing

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