Litcius/Paper detail

Moderate High-Pressure Superdormancy in <i>Bacillus</i> Spores: Properties of Superdormant Spores and Proteins Potentially Influencing Moderate High-Pressure Germination

Alessia I. Delbrück, Yvette Tritten, Paolo Nanni, Rosa Heydenreich, Alexander Mathys

2021Applied and Environmental Microbiology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Spore-forming bacteria are ubiquitous in nature and, as a consequence, inevitably enter the food chain or other processing environments. Their presence can lead to significant spoilage or safety-related issues. Intensive treatment is usually required to inactivate them; however, this treatment harms important product quality attributes. A pressure-mediated germination-inactivation approach can balance the need for effective spore inactivation and retention of sensitive ingredients. However, superdormant spores are the bottleneck preventing the successful and safe implementation of such a strategy. An in-depth understanding of moderate high-pressure germination and the underlying causes of superdormancy is necessary to advance the development of mild high pressure-based spore control technologies. The approach used in this work allowed the identification of proteins that have not yet been associated with reduced germination at moderate high pressure. This research paves the way for further studies on the germination and superdormancy mechanisms in spores, assisting the development of mild spore inactivation strategies.

Topics & Concepts

Dipicolinic acidSporeGerminationEndosporeBacillus subtilisFood spoilageFood scienceSpore germinationMicrobiologyBacterial sporeBiologyBacteriaChemistryBiochemistryBacillus (shape)ChloroplastMicrobial Inactivation MethodsBacillus and Francisella bacterial researchPlasma Applications and Diagnostics