Effects of Exogenous Yeast and Bacteria on the Microbial Population Dynamics and Outcomes of Olive Fermentations
Food fermentations are subject to tremendous selective pressures resulting in the growth and persistence of a limited number of bacterial and fungal taxa. Although these foods are vulnerable to spoilage by unintended contamination of certain microorganisms, or alternatively, can be improved by the d...
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Published in | mSphere Vol. 2; no. 1 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
United States
American Society for Microbiology
01.01.2017
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Food fermentations are subject to tremendous selective pressures resulting in the growth and persistence of a limited number of bacterial and fungal taxa. Although these foods are vulnerable to spoilage by unintended contamination of certain microorganisms, or alternatively, can be improved by the deliberate addition of starter culture microbes that accelerate or beneficially modify product outcomes, the impact of either of those microbial additions on community dynamics within the fermentations is not well understood at strain-specific or global scales. Herein, we show how exogenous spoilage yeast or starter lactic acid bacteria confer very different effects on microbial numbers and diversity in olive fermentations. Introduced microbes have long-lasting consequences and result in changes that are apparent even when levels of those inoculants and their major enzymatic activities decline. This work has direct implications for understanding bacterial and fungal invasions of microbial habitats resulting in pivotal changes to community structure and function.
In this study, we examined Sicilian-style green olive fermentations upon the addition of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
UCDFST 09-448 and/or
Pichia kudriazevii
UCDFST09-427 or the lactic acid bacteria (LAB)
Lactobacillus plantarum
AJ11R and
Leuconostoc pseudomesenteroides
BGM3R. Olives containing
S. cerevisiae
UCDFST 09-448, a strain able to hydrolyze pectin, but not
P. kudriazevii
UCDFST 09-427, a nonpectinolytic strain, exhibited excessive tissue damage within 4 weeks. DNA sequencing of fungal internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions and comparisons to a yeast-specific ITS sequence database remarkably showed that neither
S. cerevisiae
UCDFST 09-448 nor
P. kudriazevii
UCDFST 09-427 resulted in significant changes to yeast species diversity. Instead,
Candida boidinii
constituted the majority (>90%) of the total yeast present, independent of whether
S. cerevisiae
or
P. kudriazevii
was added. By comparison,
Lactobacillus
species were enriched in olives inoculated with potential starter LAB
L. plantarum
AJ11R and
L. pseudomesenteroides
BGM3R according to community 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. The bacterial diversity of those olives was significantly reduced and resembled control fermentations incubated for a longer period of time. Importantly, microbial populations were highly dynamic at the strain level, as indicated by the large variations in AJ11R and BGM3R cell numbers over time and reductions in the numbers of yeast isolates expressing polygalacturonase activity. These findings show the distinct effects of exogenous spoilage and starter microbes on indigenous communities in plant-based food fermentations that result in very different impacts on product quality.
IMPORTANCE
Food fermentations are subject to tremendous selective pressures resulting in the growth and persistence of a limited number of bacterial and fungal taxa. Although these foods are vulnerable to spoilage by unintended contamination of certain microorganisms, or alternatively, can be improved by the deliberate addition of starter culture microbes that accelerate or beneficially modify product outcomes, the impact of either of those microbial additions on community dynamics within the fermentations is not well understood at strain-specific or global scales. Herein, we show how exogenous spoilage yeast or starter lactic acid bacteria confer very different effects on microbial numbers and diversity in olive fermentations. Introduced microbes have long-lasting consequences and result in changes that are apparent even when levels of those inoculants and their major enzymatic activities decline. This work has direct implications for understanding bacterial and fungal invasions of microbial habitats resulting in pivotal changes to community structure and function. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 J.Z. and Z.B. contributed equally to this article. Citation Zaragoza J, Bendiks Z, Tyler C, Kable ME, Williams TR, Luchkovska Y, Chow E, Boundy-Mills K, Marco ML. 2017. Effects of exogenous yeast and bacteria on the microbial population dynamics and outcomes of olive fermentations. mSphere 2:e00315-16. https://doi.org/10.1128/mSphere.00315-16. |
ISSN: | 2379-5042 2379-5042 |
DOI: | 10.1128/mSphere.00315-16 |