AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines the antimicrobial properties of natural extracts from Mediterranean plants, specifically Rubus fruticosus (blackberry leaves) and Juniperus oxycedrus (juniper needles), in response to the consumer demand for safe, additive-free foods.
  • It found that these plant derivatives significantly inhibited the growth of Listeria monocytogenes, extending the lag phase and reducing eventual cell counts, with R. fruticosus essential oil being the most effective.
  • The research highlights the potential use of these underutilized plant materials in food safety applications and emphasizes further investigation into cells that are viable but not culturable, which may affect the understanding of their antimicrobial properties.

Article Abstract

The consumers' demand for safe foods without chemical additives increased the research for green solutions, based on natural antimicrobials. Plants can be an important source of bioactive compounds able to prevent the development of foodborne pathogens and spoilage microflora. This paper aimed to characterize phenolic extracts (PEs) and essential oils (EOs) obtained from Mediterranean Rubus fruticosus leaves and Juniperus oxycedrus needles and to evaluate their antimicrobial effects against Listeria monocytogenes Scott A. The growth dynamics with sub-lethal concentrations of plant derivatives were modeled and flow cytometry was used to better evidence the effect on cell viability and culturability. The results showed that these plant derivatives affected the growth of L. monocytogenes, increasing lag phase (about 40 h in the presence of PEs vs. 8 h in the control) and decreasing the final cell load of at least 1 log cycle with respect to the control. R. fruticosus EO was the most effective, determining an initial decrease of cell counts of about 6 log cycles, followed by a restart of growth after 10 h, with rate similar to the control (0.08 with R. fruticosus EO vs. 0.09 ((log CFU/ml)/h in the control) but significantly lower final cell load (7.33 vs. 8.92 log CFU/ml). According to flow cytometry, only R. fruticosus EO induced a relevant increase of dead cells, while the other plant derivatives determined different extent of sub-lethal cell injury. The discrepancy observed in some cases between viability and culturability could indicate the presence of cells not able to grow in culture media, whose fate needs to be further investigated to assess their potential recovery, thus bringing to an overestimation of the antimicrobial effect of these substances. This research contributed to increase the knowledge of these underused raw materials such as blackberry leaves and juniper needles that can be exploited in food and other industries.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9343658PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-17408-4DOI Listing

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