Affiliation:
1. Department of Food and Environmental Hygiene, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland,1and
2. Department of Microbiology, University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium2
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Leuconostoc carnosum
was shown to be the specific spoilage organism in vacuum-packaged, sliced, cooked ham showing spoilage during 3 weeks of shelf life. Identification of the specific spoilage organism was done by use of phenotypic data and
Cla
I,
Eco
RI, and
Hin
dIII reference strain ribopatterns. One hundred
L. carnosum
isolates associated with the production and spoilage of the ham were further characterized by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), together with some meat-associated
Leuconostoc
species:
L. citreum
,
L. gelidum
,
L. mesenteroides
subsp.
dextranicum
, and
L. mesenteroides
subsp.
mesenteroides. Apa
I and
Sma
I digests divided the industrial
L. carnosum
strains into 25 different PFGE types,
Apa
I and
Sma
I types being consistent. Only one specific PFGE type was associated with the spoiled packages. This type also was detected in air and raw-meat mass samples. The spoilage strain did not produce bacteriocins. Only seven isolates belonging to three different PFGE types produced bacteriocins. Similarity analysis of the industrial
L. carnosum
strains revealed a homogeneous cluster which could be divided into eight subclusters consisting of strains having at most three-fragment differences. The
L. carnosum
cluster was clearly distinguished from the other meat-associated leuconostoc clusters, with the exception of the
L. carnosum
type strain. Ribotyping can be very helpful in the identification of
L. carnosum
, but its discriminatory power is too weak for strain characterization. PFGE provides good discrimination for studies dealing with the properties of homogeneous
L. carnosum
strains.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
97 articles.
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