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Microbial ecology involved in the ripening of naturally fermented llama meat sausages. A focus on lactobacilli diversity
Resumen
Llama represents for the Andean regions a valid alternative to bovine and pork meat and thanks to the high proteins and lowfat content; it can constitute a good product for the novel food market. In this study, culture-dependent and independent methods were applied to investigate the microbial ecology of naturally fermented llama sausages produced in Northwest Argentina. Two different production technologies of llama sausage were investigated:
a
[ver mas...]
Llama represents for the Andean regions a valid alternative to bovine and pork meat and thanks to the high proteins and lowfat content; it can constitute a good product for the novel food market. In this study, culture-dependent and independent methods were applied to investigate the microbial ecology of naturally fermented llama sausages produced in Northwest Argentina. Two different production technologies of llama sausage were investigated:
a pilot-plant scale (P) and an artisanal one (A). Results obtained by High-Throughput Sequencing (HTS) of 16S rRNA amplicons showed that the production technologies influenced the development of microbial communities with a different composition throughout the entire fermentation process. Both sequencing and microbiological
counts demonstrated that Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) contributed largely to the dominant microbiota.
When a total of 230 isolates were approached by RAPD-PCR, presumptive LAB strains from P production exhibited an initial variability in RAPD fingerprints switching to a single profile at the final of ripening,while A production revealed a more heterogeneous RAPD pattern during thewhole fermentation process. The constant presence
of Lactobacillus sakei along the fermentation in both productionswas revealed by HTS and confirmed by speciesspecific PCR fromisolated strains. The technological characterization of Lb. sakei isolates evidenced their ability to grow at 15 °C, pH 4.5 and 5% NaCl (95%). Most strains hydrolyzed myofibrillar and sarcoplasmic proteins. Bacteriocins encoding genes and antimicrobial resistance were found in 35% and 42.5% of the strains, respectively. An appropriate choice of a combination of autochthonous strains in a starter formulation is fundamental to improve and standardize llama sausages safety and quality.
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Autor
Fontana, Cecilia Alejandra;
Bassi, Daniela;
López, Constanza María;
Pisacane, Vicenza;
Otero, María Claudia;
Puglisi, Edoardo;
Rebecchi, Annalisa;
Cocconcelli, Pier Sandro;
Vignolo, Graciela Margarita;
Fuente
International journal of food microbiology 236 : 17-25. (November 2016)
Fecha
2016-11
Editorial
Elsevier
ISSN
0168-1605
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Restringido
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)