| Literature DB >> 33178163 |
Athina Geronikou1, Thanyaporn Srimahaeak1, Kalliopi Rantsiou2, Georgios Triantafillidis3, Nadja Larsen1, Lene Jespersen1.
Abstract
Yeasts are generally recognized as contaminants in the production of white-brined cheeses, such as Feta and Feta-type cheeses. The most predominant yeasts species are Debaryomyces hansenii, Geotrichum candidum, Kluyveromyces marxianus, Kluyveromyces lactis, Rhodotorula mucilaginosa, and Trichosporon spp. Although their spoilage potential varies at both species and strain levels, yeasts will, in case of excessive growth, present a microbiological hazard, effecting cheese quality. To evaluate the hazard and trace routes of contamination, the exact taxonomic classification of yeasts is required. Today, identification of dairy yeasts is mainly based on DNA sequencing, various genotyping techniques, and, to some extent, advanced phenotypic identification technologies. Even though these technologies are state of the art at the scientific level, they are only hardly implemented at the industrial level. Quality defects, caused by yeasts in white-brined cheese, are mainly linked to enzymatic activities and metabolism of fermentable carbohydrates, leading to production of metabolites (CO2, fatty acids, volatile compounds, amino acids, sulfur compounds, etc.) and resulting in off-flavors, texture softening, discoloration, and swelling of cheese packages. The proliferation of spoilage yeast depends on maturation and storage conditions at each specific dairy, product characteristics, nutrients availability, and interactions with the co-existing microorganisms. To prevent and control yeast contamination, different strategies based on the principles of HACCP and Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP) have been introduced in white-brined cheese production. These strategies include milk pasteurization, refrigeration, hygienic sanitation, air filtration, as well as aseptic and modified atmosphere packaging. Though a lot of research has been dedicated to yeasts in dairy products, the role of yeast contaminants, specifically in white-brined cheeses, is still insufficiently understood. This review aims to summarize the current knowledge on the identification of contaminant yeasts in white-brined cheeses, their occurrence and spoilage potential related to different varieties of white-brined cheeses, their interactions with other microorganisms, as well as guidelines used by dairies to prevent cheese contamination.Entities:
Keywords: GMP; microbial interactions; off-flavors; spoilage yeasts; white-brined cheese; yeast identification
Year: 2020 PMID: 33178163 PMCID: PMC7593773 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.582778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Occurrence of spoilage yeasts in white-brined cheeses.
| Product | Cheese Category | Raw material (milk) | Yeast species | Country | References |
| Feta | Soft | Ovine or a mixture of ovine with caprine | Greece | ||
| Halloumi | Semi-hard | Ovine, caprine or mixture of them (optionally cow) | Greece, Cyprus | ||
| White cheese | Soft | Cow | Denmark | ||
| White-pickled | Soft | Ovine, caprine or bovine | Serbia | ||
| White-brined | Unknown | Cow | Bulgaria | ||
| Akawi | Semi-hard | Ovine, caprine or mixture of them | Lebanon, Syria | ||
| Beyaz peynir (Turkish White cheese) | Semi-hard | Ovine, caprine, cow or mixture of them | Turkey | ||
| Mihaliç | Hard | Ovine or caprine | Turkey | ||
| Jiben-Al-Arab | Soft | Ovine | Iran | ||
| Domiati | Soft | Bovine | Egypt | ||
| Serro Minas | Semi-hard | Bovine | Brazil |
FIGURE 1Association between the metabolites produced by yeasts and the quality defects in white-brined cheeses, i.e., off-flavors, discoloration and swelling.
FIGURE 2Flow-chart of Feta cheese production with indicated Critical Control Points (CCP) of the microbiologicalM, chemicalC and physicalP hazards [modified from Mauropoulos and Arvanitoyannis (1999); Tamime et al. (2007) and El-Hofi et al. (2010)].
Inhibitory activity of lactic acid bacteria, yeasts and their metabolites against yeast species, frequently occurring as contaminants in white-brined cheeses.
| Microorganisms | Dairy matrix/Media | Targets | Metabolites | References |
| Milk, yogurt, and fermented milk | Polyamides; organic acids (acetic, benzoic, lactic, 2-pyrrolidone-5-carboxylic, hexanoic, 2-hydroxybenzoic) | |||
| Sour cream and semi-hard cheese | Propionic acid; Acetic acid | |||
| Sour cream and semi-hard cheese | Lactic acid; Acetic acid Bioactive peptide (RLNFLKKIS) | |||
| Sour cream and semi-hard cheese | Not reported | |||
| Fermented milk | Not reported | |||
| M17/MRS | Organic acids | |||
| Sour cream | Bioactive peptide (DMPIQAFLLY) | |||
| Cheese model | Ammonium; Proline | |||
| Liquid cheese medium | Not reported | |||
| YEPD-methylene blue agar, and commercial cheeses (Romano and blue cheese) | Mycocins | |||
| YPD agar | Zymocin | |||
| Cheese | Not reported | |||
FIGURE 3Metabolic pathways of pyomelanin production by Yarrowia lipolytica. Abbreviations: TYRB, tyrosine aminotransferase; HPPD, 4-hydroxyl-phenyl- pyruvate dioxygenase [modified from Schmaler-Ripcke et al. (2009), Ben Tahar et al. (2020)].