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Combined use of bacteriocin‐producing strains to control <i>Listeria monocytogenes</i> regrowth in raw pork meat
13
Citations
45
References
2010
Year
Food Processing FacilitiesFood ControlFood MicrobiologyInfection ControlAntimicrobial ResistanceAerobic CulturingHealth SciencesFoodborne PathogensMeat MatrixFoodborne HazardFood PreservativesFood SafetyBacteriocin Sakacin PMicrobial ContaminationFoodborne IllnessRaw Pork MeatFood IndustryMicrobiologyMedicine
Summary Avoiding the presence of Listeria in meat and dairy products is a major challenge for the food industry. In this work, a Lactobacillus curvatus strain producing the bacteriocin sakacin P and a Pediococcus acidilactici strain producing another bacteriocin, pediocin AcH, were used as starter cultures under laboratory conditions in a Listeria ‐seeded raw‐pork‐meat matrix, which was then stored for 6 weeks at 4 °C. At 1 week intervals during the storage period, the antilisterial activity was evaluated. When either strain was added alone, the Listeria monocytogenes cfu count initially dropped from 10 2 cfu g −1 to an undetectable level by the end of week 1 or 2, but this was followed by a rebound (regrowth) 1 week later. When both strains were added together to the meat matrix, rebound was delayed, Listeria remaining undetected from the end of week 1 to the end of week 5. A rebound was observed 6 weeks post‐inoculation, but fewer than 10 cfu g −1 were counted. The use of more than one bacteriocin‐producing strain may thus overcome some of the problems limiting the effectiveness of bacteriocins in food systems.
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