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1.
During malolactic fermentation (MLF), lactic acid bacteria influence wine aroma and flavour by the production of volatile metabolites and the modification of aroma compounds derived from grapes and yeasts. The present study investigated the impact of different MLF inoculation strategies with two different Oenococcus oeni strains on cool climate Riesling wines and the volatile wine aroma profile. Four different timings were chosen for inoculation with bacteria to conduct MLF in a Riesling must/wine with a high acidity (pH 2.9–3.1). Treatments with simultaneous inoculation showed a reduced total fermentation time (alcoholic and malolactic) compared to the sequential inoculations. No negative impact of simultaneous alcoholic and malolactic fermentation on fermentation success and on the final wine volatile aroma composition was observed. Compared to sequential inoculation, wines with co-inoculation tended to have higher concentrations of ethyl and acetate esters, including acetic acid phenylethylester, acetic acid 3-methylbutylester, butyric acid ethylester, lactic acid ethylester and succinic acid diethylester. Results of this study provide some alternatives to diversify the number of wine styles by safely conducting MLF in low-pH, cool-climate white musts with potential high alcohol content.  相似文献   

2.
Plasmids in lactic acid bacteria occasionally confer adaptive advantages improving the growth and behaviour of their host cells. They are often associated to starter cultures used in the food industry and could be a signature of their superiority. Oenococcus oeni is the main lactic acid bacteria species encountered in wine. It performs the malolactic fermentation that occurs in most wines after alcoholic fermentation and contributes to their quality and stability. Industrial O. oeni starters may be used to better control malolactic fermentation. Starters are selected empirically by virtue of their fermentation kinetics and capacity to survive in wine. This study was initiated with the aim to determine whether O. oeni contains plasmids of technological interest. Screening of 11 starters and 33 laboratory strains revealed two closely related plasmids, named pOENI-1 (18.3-kb) and pOENI-1v2 (21.9-kb). Sequence analyses indicate that they use the theta mode of replication, carry genes of maintenance and replication and two genes possibly involved in wine adaptation encoding a predicted sulphite exporter (tauE) and a NADH:flavin oxidoreductase of the old yellow enzyme family (oye). Interestingly, pOENI-1 and pOENI-1v2 were detected only in four strains, but this included three industrial starters. PCR screenings also revealed that tauE is present in six of the 11 starters, being probably inserted in the chromosome of some strains. Microvinification assays performed using strains with and without plasmids did not disclose significant differences of survival in wine or fermentation kinetics. However, analyses of 95 wines at different phases of winemaking showed that strains carrying the plasmids or the genes tauE and oye were predominant during spontaneous malolactic fermentation. Taken together, the results revealed a family of related plasmids associated with industrial starters and indigenous strains performing spontaneous malolactic fermentation that possibly contribute to the technological performance of strains in wine.  相似文献   

3.
Bioethanol fermentation is usually contaminated by bacteria, especially lactic acid bacteria (LAB), thereby leading to decrease of bioethanol yield and serious economic losses. Nisin is safer for controlling of bacterial contamination than antibiotics that are widely applied in industry. Moreover, in LAB contaminative bioethanol fermentation system, consistently decreased pH value provides opportunity to realize pH value responsive material-based release of anti-bacteria substances for intelligent and persistent controlling of bacterial contamination. In this study, nisin was embedded into pH-sensitive poly(4-vinylpyridine) (P4VP) microspheres synthesized by suspension polymerization to realize intelligent controlling of Lactobacillus plantarum contamination in bioethanol fermentation. Chloramphenicol with the highest antimicrobial activity and excellent stability was chosen as the model drug to be embedded into P4VP microspheres to test the drug release behavior. The drug release curve of chloramphenicol-loaded P4VP microspheres showed sustained and pH-responsive release properties. The diameters of the microspheres ranged from 40 to 100 µm. The encapsulation efficiency of nisin into P4VP microspheres was 47.67% and the drug-loading capacity of nisin was 2.5%. Nisin-loaded P4VP microspheres were added into the simulated contaminative fermentation system, and successfully reversed the decline of bioethanol yield secondary to L. plantarum contamination. The results in this study indicated that L. plantarum contamination in bioethanol fermentation could be effectively controlled by nisin-loaded P4VP microspheres.  相似文献   

4.
Lactic acid bacteria in the quality improvement and depreciation of wine   总被引:36,自引:0,他引:36  
The winemaking process includes two main steps: lactic acid bacteria are responsible for the malolactic fermentation which follows the alcoholic fermentation by yeasts. Both types of microorganisms are present on grapes and on cellar equipment. Yeasts are better adapted to growth in grape must than lactic acid bacteria, so the alcoholic fermentation starts quickly. In must, up to ten lactic acid bacteria species can be identified. They belong to the Lactobacillus, Pediococcus, Leuconostoc and Oenococcus genera. Throughout alcoholic fermentation, a natural selection occurs and finally the dominant species is O. oeni, due to interactions between yeasts and bacteria and between bacteria themselves. After bacterial growth, when the population is over 106CFU/ml, malolactic transformation is the obvious change in wine composition. However, many other substrates can be metabolized. Some like remaining sugars and citric acid are always assimilated by lactic acid bacteri a, thus providing them with energy and carbon. Other substrates such as some amino acids may be used following pathways restricted to strains carrying the adequate enzymes. Some strains can also produce exopolysaccharides. All these transformations greatly influence the sensory and hygienic quality of wine. Malic acid transformation is encouraged because it induces deacidification. Diacetyl produced from citric acid is also helpful to some extent. Sensory analyses show that many other reactions change the aromas and make malolactic fermentation beneficial, but they are as yet unknown. On the contrary, an excess of acetic acid, the synthesis of glucane, biogenic amines and precursors of ethylcarbamate are undesirable. Fortunately, lactic acid bacteria normally multiply in dry wines; moreover some of these activities are not widespread. Moreover, the most striking trait of wine lactic acid bacteria is their capacity to adapt to a hostile environment. The mechanisms for this are not yet c ompletely elucidated . Molecular biology has provided some explanations for the behaviour and the metabolism of bacteria in wine. New tools are now available to detect the presence of desirable and undesirable strains. Even if much remains unknown, winemakers and oenologists can nowadays better control the process. By acting upon the diverse microflora and grape musts, they are more able to produce healthy and pleasant wines.  相似文献   

5.
After the appearance of “Etudes sur le vin” by Pasteur, in enology lactic acid bacteria have been considered as deteriorating agents for more than 50 years. About 1920, Ferré in Burgundy and Ribéreau-Gayon in Bordeaux demonstrated the enological importance of the transformation of malic to lactic acid. This notion is now generally accepted in most vinicultural areas. Malolactic fermentation is encouraged, especially for red wines, for two reasons: a) it eliminates the taste of malic acid and lowers the acidity of the wine, b) it assures the biological stability of wines conserved with a minimum of sulphurous anhydride. In traditional vinification, malolactic fermentation is the result of bacterial growth. It is spontaneous, that means induced by the endogenous lactic acid bacteria of grapes and winery equipment. In the must, yeasts and bacteria develop simultaneously; in the antagonism between yeasts and bacteria the bacterial population is more often becoming dominant than being suppressed. The grapes are sulphited so that bacterial growth occurs only after complete exhaustion of sugars by the yeasts. Consequently, alteration of the wine, as a result of sugar fermentation by the bacteria, is prevented. In a well-controlled vinification lactic acid bacteria can complete their growth cycle in the wine. Wine, however, is a poor culture medium and the bacteria multiply under restricted nutritional, physical and chemical conditions. As a consequence, malolactic fermentation is difficult to control in practice, in spite of all the research done for more than 30 years. For a long time, one has tried to stimulate malolactic fermentation by inoculating wine with bacteria. Until now, the problem has been to determine the biomass of bacteria, sufficient for fermentation to take place as well as the quality required. The desired physiological state of the bacteria in the inoculum is also not known.  相似文献   

6.
Microbiology of the malolactic fermentation: Molecular aspects   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Abstract Malolactic fermentation conducted by lactic acid bacteria follows alcoholic fermentation during winemaking, and several positive effects make it indispensable for most wines. Research has focused on the growth and physiology of lactic acid bacteria in wine; resulting in the design of malolactic starter cultures. Future work on these starters will concentrate on aromatic changes as additional criteria for strain selection. Although the main features of the malolactic enzyme and its gene are known, the detailed mechanism of the malolactic reaction remains unclear. Cloning and expression of this activity in enological strains of Saccharomyces cereuisiae might be one of the next most important advances in the control of malic acid degradation in wine.  相似文献   

7.
We showed that the growth of lactic acid bacteria during alcoholic fermentation depends on the composition of the must. We illustrated how the addition of sulfur dioxide to the must before fermentation and the temperature of storage both affect the growth of these bacteria in the wine. Whereas species of Lactobacillus and Leuconostoc mesenteroides were isolated from grapes and must, Leuconostoc oenos was the only species isolated after alcoholic fermentation. This organism was responsible for the malolactic fermentation. Isolates of this species varied in their ability to ferment pentoses and hexoses. The survival of Leuconostoc oenos in wines after malolactic fermentation depended on wine pH, alcohol concentration, SO2 concentration, and temperature of storage.  相似文献   

8.
The levels of yeasts and lactic acid bacteria that naturally developed during the vinification of two red and two white Bordeaux wines were quantitatively examined. Yeasts of the genera Rhodotorula, Pichia, Candida, and Metschnikowia occurred at low levels in freshly extracted grape musts but died off as soon as fermentation commenced. Kloeckera apiculata (Hanseniaspora uvarum), Torulopsis stellata, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the dominant yeasts in musts, proliferated to conduct alcoholic fermentation. K. apiculata and eventually T. stellata died off as fermentation progressed, leaving S. cerevisiae as the dominant yeast until the termination of fermentation by the addition of sulfur dioxide. At least two different strains of S. cerevisiae were involved in the fermentation of one of the red wines. Low levels of lactic acid bacteria (Pediococcus cerevisiae, Leuconostoc mesenteroides, and Lactobacillus spp.) were present in grape musts but died off during alcoholic fermentation. The malolactic fermentation developed in both red wines soon after alcoholic fermentation and correlated with the vigorous growth of at least three different strains of Leuconostoc oenos.  相似文献   

9.
Thirty-two strains were isolated from spoiled port wines, from musts and from various styles of young, Northeastern Portuguese red table wines that had undergone spontaneous malolactic fermentation. Comparison of their SDS-PAGE whole-cell protein patterns with an SDS-PAGE database of lactic acid bacteria indicated that the isolates were members of the species Leuconostoc oenos or Lactobacillus paracasei subsp. paracasei. The latter were found in low acidity table wines and in port wine. The isolation of Lactobacillus paracasei strains from wines indicates the importance of using known strains for wine deacidification because spontaneous malolactic fermentation of table wines can occur from an indigenous flora, adapted to the particular composition of the wine.  相似文献   

10.
Lactic acid bacteria contribute to wine transformation during malolactic fermentation. They generally improve the sensorial properties of wine, but some strains produce histamine, a toxic substance that causes health issues. Histamine-producing strains belong to species of the genera Oenococcus, Lactobacillus, and Pediococcus. All carry an hdcA gene coding for a histidine decarboxylase that converts histidine into histamine. For this study, a method based on quantitative PCR and targeting hdcA was developed to enumerate these bacteria in wine. This method was efficient for determining populations of 1 to 107 CFU per ml. An analysis of 264 samples collected from 116 wineries of the same region during malolactic fermentation revealed that these bacteria were present in almost all wines and at important levels, exceeding 103 CFU per ml in 70% of the samples. Histamine occurred at an often important level in wines containing populations of the above-mentioned bacteria. Fifty-four colonies of histamine producers isolated from four wines were characterized at the genetic level. All were strains of Oenococcus oeni that grouped into eight strain types by randomly amplified polymorphic DNA analysis. Some strains were isolated from wines collected in distant wineries. Moreover, hdcA was detected on a large and possibly unstable plasmid in these strains of O. oeni. Taken together, the results suggest that the risk of histamine production exists in almost all wines and is important when the population of histamine-producing bacteria exceeds 103 per ml. Strains of O. oeni producing histamine are frequent in wine during malolactic fermentation, but they may lose this capacity during subcultures in the laboratory.  相似文献   

11.
This work reports the influence of the high acidity and high phenolic content in apple musts on the development of alcoholic and malolactic fermentations and on the final chemical and microbiological composition of the ciders. Four different musts were obtained by pressing several varieties and proportions of cider apples from the Basque Country (Northern Spain). Specially acidic and phenolic varieties were selected. Three musts were obtained in experimental stations and the fourth one, in a cider factory following usual procedures. The evolution of these musts was monitored during five months by measuring 18 parameters throughout eight samplings. In the most acidic of the three experimental musts, yeasts were added to complete the alcoholic fermentation. In the rest of the musts, alcoholic and malolactic fermentations took place spontaneously due to natural microflora and no chemical was added to control these processes. Malolactic fermentation (MLF) finished before alcoholic fermentation in the three tanks obtained in experimental stations, even in the most acidic and phenolic one (pH 3.18, 1.78 g tannic acid/l). After four months, these ciders maintained low levels of lactic acid bacteria (10(4)CFU/ml) and low content of acetic acid (<0.60 g/l). Both fermentations began simultaneously in the must obtained in the cider factory, but MLF finished 10 days after alcoholic fermentation. Subsequently, this must maintained a high population of lactic acid bacteria (>10(6)CFU/ml), causing a higher production of acetic acid (>1.00 g/l) than in the other ciders. These results show the possible advantages of MLF finishing before alcoholic fermentation.  相似文献   

12.
Lactococcus lactis subsp lactis BSA (L. lactis BSA) was isolated from a commercial fermented product (BSA Food Ingredients, Montreal, Canada) containing mixed bacteria that are used as starter for food fermentation. In order to increase the bacteriocin production by L. lactis BSA, different fermentation conditions were conducted. They included different volumetric combinations of two culture media (the Man, Rogosa and Sharpe (MRS) broth and skim milk), agitation level (0 and 100 rpm) and concentration of commercial nisin (0, 0.15, and 0.30 µg/ml) added into culture media as stimulant agent for nisin production. During fermentation, samples were collected and used for antibacterial evaluation against Lactobacillus sakei using agar diffusion assay. Results showed that medium containing 50 % MRS broth and 50 % skim milk gave better antibacterial activity as compared to other medium formulations. Agitation (100 rpm) did not improve nisin production by L. lactis BSA. Adding 0.15 µg/ml of nisin into the medium-containing 50 % MRS broth and 50 % skim milk caused the highest nisin activity of 18,820 AU/ml as compared to other medium formulations. This activity was 4 and ~3 times higher than medium containing 100 % MRS broth without added nisin (~4700 AU/ml) and 100 % MRS broth with 0.15 µg/ml of added nisin (~6650 AU/ml), respectively.  相似文献   

13.
In winemaking, after the alcoholic fermentation of red wines and some white wines, L-malic acid must be converted into L-lactic acid to reduce the acidity. This malolactic fermentation (MLF) is usually carried out by the lactic acid bacteria Oenococcus oeni. Depending on the level of process control, selected O. oeni is inoculated or the natural microbiota of the cellar is used. This study considers the link between growth and MLF for five strains of O. oeni species. The kinetics of growth and L-malic acid consumption were followed in modified MRS medium (20 °C, pH 3.5, and 10 % ethanol) in anaerobic conditions. A large variability was found among the strains for both their growth and their consumption of L-malic acid. There was no direct link between biomass productivities and consumption of L-malic acid among strains but there was a link of proportionality between the specific growth of a strain and its specific consumption of L-malic acid. Experiments with and without malic acid clearly demonstrated that malic acid consumption improved the growth of strains. This link was quantified by a mathematical model comparing the intrinsic malic acid consumption capacity of the strains.  相似文献   

14.
Besides lactic acid, many lactic acid bacteria also produce proteinaceous metabolites (bacteriocins) such as nisin. As catabolite repression and end-product inhibition limit production of both products, we have investigated the use of alternative methods of supplying substrate and neutralizing or extracting lactic acid to increase yields. Fed-batch fermentation trials using a stillage-based medium with pH control by NH4OH resulted in improved lactic acid (83.4 g/l, 3.18 g/l/h, 95% yield) and nisin (1,260 IU/ml, 84,000 IU/l/h, 14,900 IU/g) production. Removing particulate matter from the stillage-based medium increased nisin production (1,590 IU/ml, 33,700 IU/g), but decreased lactic acid production (58.5 g/l, 1.40 g/l/h, 96% yield). Removing lactic acid by ion exchange resins stimulated higher lactic acid concentrations (60 to 65 g/l) and productivities (2.0 to 2.6 g/l/h) in the filtered stillage medium at the expense of nisin production (1,500 IU/ml, 25,800 IU/g).  相似文献   

15.
Aims:  To characterize the genetic and phenotypic diversity of 135 lactic acid bacteria (LAB) strains isolated from Italian wines that undergone spontaneous malolactic fermentation (MLF) and propose a multiphasic selection of new Oenococcus oeni malolactic starters.
Methods and Results:  One hundred and thirty-five LAB strains were isolated from 12 different wines. On the basis of 16S amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis (ARDRA) with three restriction enzymes and 16S rRNA gene sequencing, 120 O. oeni strains were identified. M13-based RAPD analysis was employed to investigate the molecular diversity of O. oeni population. Technological properties of different O. oeni genotypes were evaluated in synthetic medium at increasing selective pressure, such as low pH (3·5, 3·2 and 3·0) and high ethanol values (10, 11 and 13% v/v). Finally, the malolactic activity of one selected strain was assessed in wine by malolactic trial in winery.
Conclusions:  The research explores the genomic diversity of wine bacteria in Italian wines and characterizes their malolactic metabolism, providing an efficient strategy to select O. oeni strains with desirable malolactic performances and able to survive in conditions simulating the harsh wine environment.
Significance and Impact of the Study:  This article contributes to a better understanding of microbial diversity of O. oeni population in Italian wines and reports a framework to select new potentially O. oeni starters from Italian wines during MLF.  相似文献   

16.
The effect of salt (NaCl) on the efficacy of nisin in preventing outgrowth of Bacillus licheniformis spores was determined in Plate Count Agar (PCA). An equivalent liquid medium was used for heat activation. Nisin and salt were added to the heat-activation medium, the PCA, or both. The spores were extremely sensitive to nisin; outgrowth were completely inhibited in salt-free media when 10 iu/ml of nisin was present in both the heat-activation and the growth media or when 100 iu/ml nisin was present in either the heat-activation and the growth medium. In media supplemented with 1% salt, outgrowth occurred from 1% of spores exposed to 100 iu/ml nisin in either the heat-activation or the growth medium. A 3% salt supplement was necessary before detectable outgrowth occurred when both the heat-activation and the growth media contained 100 iu/ml nisin. Salt appears to antagonize the sporicidal action of nisin by interfering with nisin adsorption onto the spore.  相似文献   

17.
Inhibition and stimulation reactions between Champagne Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains and lactic acid bacteria have been studied. These yeast-bacterium interactions may account for the difficulties often observed in initiating the process of malolactic fermentation in wines and could be used as a criterion for selecting wine yeasts.  相似文献   

18.
Inoculating grape musts with wine yeast and lactic acid bacteria (LAB) concurrently in order to induce simultaneous alcoholic fermentation (AF) and malolactic fermentation (MLF) can be an efficient alternative to overcome potential inhibition of LAB in wines because of high ethanol concentrations and reduced nutrient content. In this study, the simultaneous inoculation of yeast and LAB into must was compared with a traditional vinification protocol, where MLF was induced after completion of AF. For this, two suitable commercial yeast-bacterium combinations were tested in cool-climate Chardonnay must. The time courses of glucose and fructose, acetaldehyde, several organic acids, and nitrogenous compounds were measured along with the final values of other key wine parameters. Sensory evaluation was done after 12 months of storage. The current study could not confirm a negative impact of simultaneous AF/MLF on fermentation success and kinetics or on final wine parameters. While acetic acid concentrations were slightly increased in wines after simultaneous AF/MLF, the differences were of neither practical nor legal significance. No statistically significant differences were found with regard to the final values of pH or total acidity and the concentrations of ethanol, acetaldehyde, glycerol, citric and lactic acids, and the nitrogen compounds arginine, ammonia, urea, citrulline, and ornithine. Sensory evaluation by a semiexpert panel confirmed the similarity of the wines. However, simultaneous inoculation led to considerable reductions in overall fermentation durations. Furthermore, differences of physiological and microbiological relevance were found. Specifically, we report the vinification of “super-dry” wines devoid of glucose and fructose after simultaneous inoculation of yeast and bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
Nisin added at up to 1000 IU ml-1 did not affect ethanol production or cell growth during fermentation of sulphuric acid casein whey permeate by Kluyveromyces marxianus Y-113. Nisin reduced the bacterial population markedly when added at 100 IU ml-1 to whey permeate contaminated by addition of incubated cultures derived from milk or whey. The ethanol production rate and yield in the contaminated cultures treated with nisin did not differ from the control values.  相似文献   

20.
The use of nisin to control the lactobacilli responsible for the over-ripening of kimchi, traditional Korean fermented vegetables, was studied. Of the 40 strains of lactic acid bacteria studied, most were sensitive to nisin at a concentration of 100 IU ml-1, while two strains appeared to be resistant. In MRS broth containing nisin at concentrations of 100-300 IU ml-1, the growth of sensitive strains of Lactobacillus plantarum was delayed for 2-3 d at 20 degrees C. When nisin was added to kimchi at a concentration of 100 IU ml-1, the growth of Lactobacillus spp. was inhibited more than the growth of Leuconostoc spp. Scanning electron micrograph observations confirmed the results, demonstrating the predominance of cocci in kimchi containing nisin. These results suggest that at recommended levels, nisin can be used to preserve kimchi by inhibiting lactobacilli more effectively than other lactic acid bacteria involved in kimchi fermentation.  相似文献   

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