| Literature DB >> 25333463 |
Stéphane Chaillou1, Aurélie Chaulot-Talmon1, Hélène Caekebeke2, Mireille Cardinal3, Souad Christieans4, Catherine Denis5, Marie Hélène Desmonts6, Xavier Dousset7, Carole Feurer8, Erwann Hamon6, Jean-Jacques Joffraud3, Stéphanie La Carbona5, Françoise Leroi3, Sabine Leroy9, Sylvie Lorre10, Sabrina Macé7, Marie-France Pilet7, Hervé Prévost7, Marina Rivollier4, Dephine Roux2, Régine Talon9, Monique Zagorec7, Marie-Christine Champomier-Vergès1.
Abstract
The microbial spoilage of meat and seafood products with short shelf lives is responsible for a significant amount of food waste. Food spoilage is a very heterogeneous process, involving the growth of various, poorly characterized bacterial communities. In this study, we conducted 16S ribosomal RNA gene pyrosequencing on 160 samples of fresh and spoiled foods to comparatively explore the bacterial communities associated with four meat products and four seafood products that are among the most consumed food items in Europe. We show that fresh products are contaminated in part by a microbiota similar to that found on the skin and in the gut of animals. However, this animal-derived microbiota was less prevalent and less abundant than a core microbiota, psychrotrophic in nature, mainly originated from the environment (water reservoirs). We clearly show that this core community found on meat and seafood products is the main reservoir of spoilage bacteria. We also show that storage conditions exert strong selective pressure on the initial microbiota: alpha diversity in fresh samples was 189±58 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) but dropped to 27±12 OTUs in spoiled samples. The OTU assemblage associated with spoilage was shaped by low storage temperatures, packaging and the nutritional value of the food matrix itself. These factors presumably act in tandem without any hierarchical pattern. Most notably, we were also able to identify putative new clades of dominant, previously undescribed bacteria occurring on spoiled seafood, a finding that emphasizes the importance of using culture-independent methods when studying food microbiota.Mesh:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25333463 PMCID: PMC4409155 DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2014.202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISME J ISSN: 1751-7362 Impact factor: 10.302