Antimicrobial Properties of Lyophilized Extracts of Olive Fruit, Pomegranate and Orange Peel Extracts against Foodborne Pathogenic and Spoilage Bacteria and Fungi In Vitro and in Food Matrices.

Molecules

Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, School of Agricultural Sciences, Karditsa Campus, University of Thessaly, Terma Odou N. Temponera, 43100 Karditsa, Greece.

Published: November 2021

Several novel antimicrobials with different concentrations of olive, pomegranate, and orange fruit pulp extracts were produced from agricultural byproducts and, after lyophilization, their antimicrobial activity and potential synergistic effects were evaluated in vitro and in food samples against foodborne pathogenic and spoilage bacteria and fungi. The Minimum Inhibitory of the tested bacteria was 7.5% or 10%, while fungi were inhibited at a concentration of 10% or above. The optical density of bacterial and yeast cultures was reduced to a different extent with all tested antimicrobial powders, compared to a control without antimicrobials, and mycelium growth of fungi was also restricted with extracts containing at least 90% olive extract. In food samples with inoculated pathogens and spoilage bacteria and fungi, the 100% olive extract was most inhibitory against , and in fresh burger and cheese spread samples (by 0.6 to 1.8 log cfu/g), except that was better inhibited by a 90% olive and 10% pomegranate extract in burgers. The latter extract was also the most effective in controlling the growth of inoculated fungi (, , ) in both yogurt and tomato juice samples, where it reduced fungal growth by 1-2.2 log cfu/g at the end of storage period. The results demonstrate that these novel encapsulated extracts could serve as natural antimicrobials of wide spectrum, in order to replace synthetic preservatives in foods and cosmetics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8621086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules26227038DOI Listing

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