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Abiotic and Microbiotic Factors Controlling Biofilm Formation by Thermophilic Sporeformers
Authors:Yu Zhao  Martien P. M. Caspers  Karin I. Metselaar  Paulo de Boer  Guus Roeselers  Roy Moezelaar  Masja Nierop Groot  Roy C. Montijn  Tjakko Abee  Remco Kort
Affiliation:Top Institute Food and Nutrition, Wageningen, The Netherlandsa;TNO Microbiology and Systems Biology, Zeist, The Netherlandsb;Laboratory of Food Microbiologyc;Food and Biobased Research,d Wageningen University and Research Centre, Wageningen, The Netherlands ;Molecular Cell Physiology, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlandse
Abstract:One of the major concerns in the production of dairy concentrates is the risk of contamination by heat-resistant spores from thermophilic bacteria. In order to acquire more insight in the composition of microbial communities occurring in the dairy concentrate industry, a bar-coded 16S amplicon sequencing analysis was carried out on milk, final products, and fouling samples taken from dairy concentrate production lines. The analysis of these samples revealed the presence of DNA from a broad range of bacterial taxa, including a majority of mesophiles and a minority of (thermophilic) spore-forming bacteria. Enrichments of fouling samples at 55°C showed the accumulation of predominantly Brevibacillus and Bacillus, whereas enrichments at 65°C led to the accumulation of Anoxybacillus and Geobacillus species. Bacterial population analysis of biofilms grown using fouling samples as an inoculum indicated that both Anoxybacillus and Geobacillus preferentially form biofilms on surfaces at air-liquid interfaces rather than on submerged surfaces. Three of the most potent biofilm-forming strains isolated from the dairy factory industrial samples, including Geobacillus thermoglucosidans, Geobacillus stearothermophilus, and Anoxybacillus flavithermus, have been characterized in detail with respect to their growth conditions and spore resistance. Strikingly, Geobacillus thermoglucosidans, which forms the most thermostable spores of these three species, is not able to grow in dairy intermediates as a pure culture but appears to be dependent for growth on other spoilage organisms present, probably as a result of their proteolytic activity. These results underscore the importance of abiotic and microbiotic factors in niche colonization in dairy factories, where the presence of thermophilic sporeformers can affect the quality of end products.
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