Author:
Chen Yonggan,Gu Fenglin,Li Jihua,He Shuzhen,Xu Fei,Fang Yiming
Abstract
ABSTRACTVanilla beans were analyzed using biochemical methods, which revealed that glucovanillin disperses from the inner part to the outer part of the vanilla bean during the curing process and is simultaneously hydrolyzed by β-d-glucosidase. Enzymatic hydrolysis was found to occur on the surface of the vanilla beans. Transcripts of the β-d-glucosidase gene (bgl) of colonizing microorganisms were detected. The results directly indicate that colonizing microorganisms are involved in glucovanillin hydrolysis. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences showed that the colonizing microorganisms mainly belonged to theBacillusgenus.bglwas detected in all the isolates and presented clustering similar to that of the isolate taxonomy. Furthermore, inoculation of green fluorescent protein-tagged isolates showed that theBacillusisolates can colonize vanilla beans. Glucovanillin was metabolized as the sole source of carbon in a culture of the isolates within 24 h. These isolates presented unique glucovanillin degradation capabilities. Vanillin was the major volatile compound in the culture. Other compounds, such as α-cubebene, β-pinene, and guaiacol, were detected in some isolate cultures. ColonizingBacillusisolates were found to hydrolyze glucovanillin in culture, indirectly demonstrating the involvement of colonizingBacillusisolates in glucovanillin hydrolysis during the vanilla curing process. Based on these results, we conclude that colonizingBacillusisolates produce β-d-glucosidase, which mediates glucovanillin hydrolysis and influences flavor formation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
14 articles.
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