| Literature DB >> 29721439 |
Abstract
Bio-preservation is a technique of extending the shelf life of food by using natural or controlled microbiota or antimicrobials. The fermentation products as well as beneficial bacteria are generally selected in this process to control spoilage and render pathogen inactive. The special interest organism or central organism used for this purpose is lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and their metabolites. They are capable to exhibit antimicrobial properties and helpful in imparting unique flavour and texture to the food products. The major compounds produced by LAB are bacteriocin, organic acids and hydrogen peroxide. Bacteriocin is peptides or proteins with antimicrobial activity. On the basis of size, structure and post-translational modification, bacteriocin is divided into four different classes. Due to non-toxic, non-immunogenic, thermo-resistance characteristics and broad bactericidal activity, LAB bacteriocins are considered good bio-preservative agents. The most common LAB bactriocin is nisin which has wider applications in food industry and has been Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved. Nisin and other bacteriocin are being used in vegetables products, dairy and meat industries. Apart from LAB metabolites, bacteriophages and endolysins has promising role in food processing, preservation and safety. Bacteriocins and endolysins are more suitable for DNA shuffling and protein engineering to generate highly potent variants with expanded activity spectrum. Genetically modified bacteriophages may also be helpful in bio-preservation, however; their safety issues must be addressed properly before selection as bio-preservative agent.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteriocins; Bacteriophages; Bio-preservation; Endolysins; Lactic acid bacteria
Year: 2018 PMID: 29721439 PMCID: PMC5918123 DOI: 10.4314/ovj.v8i1.16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Vet J ISSN: 2218-6050
Natural antimicrobials for food bio-preservation.
| Antimicrobials | Source | Food bio-preservation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Antimicrobial substances derived from bacterial cell metabolism | Organic acids | Main end products of fermentation. | Decrease the pH of surrounding environment, creating a selective barrier against non-acidophiles. Lactic acid exerts antimicrobial effect by disruption of the cytoplasmic membrane and interference with membrane potential. |
| CO2 | Heterofermentative LAB produces CO2 as a byproduct of sugar fermentation. | Creation of an anaerobic environment and antagonistic effects specifically against aerobic bacteria and produce carbonic acid. | |
| Diacetyl (2,3-butanedione) | LAB as a by-product of metabolic activity | Antibacterial activity against Listeria, Salmonella, Escherichia coli, Yersinia, and Aeromonas. | |
| Hydrogen peroxide | Produces by LAB in presence of oxygen and action of flavoprotein oxidases or NADH peroxidase. | Antibacterial effect through oxidative damage of proteins and increase of membrane permeability. | |
| Reuterin | Low molecular- weight antimicrobial compound produced by | Antimicrobial activity against bacteria as well as yeasts and molds by inhibiting DNA synthesis. | |
| Reutericyclin | Reutericyclin-producing strains of LAB. | Reutericyclin acts as a proton ionophore and dissipation of the proton motive force against gram-positive bacteria including | |
| Antifungal compounds | Natamycin (pimaricin) | Produced from | Broad-spectrum antifungal biopreservative for foods and beverages by binding irreversibly to the cell membrane of fungi and causes membrane hyperpermeability leading to rapid leakage of essential ions and peptides and ultimately cell lysis. |
| Antimicrobials from Animal Sources | Lysozyme | Naturally found as part of defense system of living organisms. | Generally recognized as safe (GRAS) for direct addition to foods. |
| Lactoferrin | Natural protein found in milk and other secretions. | Antimicrobial activity due to its iron-binding capacity and polycationic nature against a wide range of bacteria including foodborne pathogens like | |
| Lactoperoxidase | Antimicrobial system that originated from milk. | Effective against gram-negative bacteria. | |
| Ovotransferrin | Produced by hydrolysis of natural proteins. | Inhibits bacterial growth due to iron deprivation. | |
| Protamine | Naturally present in spermatic cells of fish, birds and mammals. | Broad antimicrobial activity against gram-positive bacteria, gram-negative bacteria, and fungi. Used as preservative in wide variety of foods ranging from confection items to fruits and rice. | |
| Pleurocidin | Present in myeloid cells and mucosal tissues of many vertebrates and Invertebrates. | Antimicrobial activity against several foodborne bacteria such as | |
| Chitosan | Polycationic biopolymer naturally present in exoskeletons of crustaceans and arthropods. | Considered as safe food additive and has antibacterial activity against both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria such as | |
| Antimicrobials derived from plants | Essential oils such as saponins, flavonoids, carvacrol, thymol, citral, eugenol, linalool, terpenes, and their precursors | Plant material like flowers, buds, seeds, leaves, twigs, bark, herbs, wood, fruits and roots. | The concentration of 0.05–0.1% of essential oils has demonstrated activity against pathogens, such as |
Classification of bacteriocins
| Class | Nomenclature | Qualities | Examples | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class-I | Post-translationally modified peptides called Lantibiotics | Characterized by distinctive thioether-based intramolecular rings of lanthionine and β-methyl-lanthionine | Nisin, discovered in 1928, lacticin | Xie and van der Donk, 2004 |
| Class-II | Thermostable, non-modified non-lantibiotic linear peptides of <10 kDa. It is recognized as largest class among Gram positive bacteriocins and further divided into three subclasses based on distinctive N-terminal sequence. i. Class II-1-Pediocin-like bacteriocins ii. Class II-2 lacks leader peptide iii. Class II-3 other than above. | Characterized By short cationic peptides with high isoelectric points. It contains potent-antilisteria activity | Pediocin PA-1/AcH produced by | Breukink |
| Class-III | Comprises large (> 30 KDa) heat labile proteins like colicin- V and microcins. | Bacteriocins are Gram negative circular peptides characterized by a peptide bond between the C- and N-terminus. It possesses the bacteriolytic extracellular enzymes like hemolysins and muramidases which can mimic the physiological activities of bacteriocins. | Helveticin J of | Wiedemann |
| Class-IV | Circular peptides posses intriguing and novel type of antimicrobial substances produced not only by bacteria but also by plants and mammalian cells. | Characterized by a peptide bond between the C- and N-terminus are clustered. They are existed in form of head-to-tail peptide chain ligation, which makes thermmolecules with neither an origin nor an end. | Enterocin AS-48 | Martínez |
Common bacteriocins and their possible uses in food industry.
| Bacteriocin | Food application | |
|---|---|---|
| Dairy industry | Nisin | |
| Pediocin AcH | Effective against milk and Cheddar and Munster cheeses against | |
| Meat industry | Nisin, Enterocin AS-48, Enterocins A and B, Sakacin, Leucocin A and especially Pediocin PA-l/AcH alone or in combination with several physicochemical treatments like modified atmosphere packaging, high hydrostatic pressure (HHP), heat and chemical preservatives | Quite effective against |
| Bacteriocinogenic LAB | Bio-protective cultures to protect pathogens in food processing. | |
| Pediocin PA-l/AcH | It is more suitable for use in meat and meat products than nisin but | |
| Vegetable products | Nisin | In tinned vegetables and fruit juices. |
| Pediocin PA-1/AcH | In salad and fruit juices. | |
| Enterocin AS-48 | Effective against | |
| Fish products | Combination of nisin and Microgard | Gram-negative microorganisms generally encountered in fresh chilled salmon and |
| Bacteriocins culture containing | In inhibition of | |