Affiliation:
1. Department of Agricultural Sciences, Division of Microbiology, University of Naples Federico II, Portici, Italy
2. Department of Animal Health, Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale del Mezzogiorno, Portici, Italy
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Microbial contamination in food processing plants can play a fundamental role in food quality and safety. The aims of this study were to learn more about the possible influence of the meat processing environment on initial fresh meat contamination and to investigate the differences between small-scale retail distribution (SD) and large-scale retail distribution (LD) facilities. Samples were collected from butcheries (
n
= 20), including LD (
n
= 10) and SD (
n
= 10) facilities, over two sampling campaigns. Samples included fresh beef and pork cuts and swab samples from the knife, the chopping board, and the butcher's hand. The microbiota of both meat samples and environmental swabs were very complex, including more than 800 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) collapsed at the species level. The 16S rRNA sequencing analysis showed that core microbiota were shared by 80% of the samples and included
Pseudomonas
spp.,
Streptococcus
spp.,
Brochothrix
spp.,
Psychrobacter
spp., and
Acinetobacter
spp. Hierarchical clustering of the samples based on the microbiota showed a certain separation between meat and environmental samples, with higher levels of
Proteobacteria
in meat. In particular, levels of
Pseudomonas
and several
Enterobacteriaceae
members were significantly higher in meat samples, while
Brochothrix
,
Staphylococcus
, lactic acid bacteria, and
Psychrobacter
prevailed in environmental swab samples. Consistent clustering was also observed when metabolic activities were considered by predictive metagenomic analysis of the samples. An increase in carbohydrate metabolism was predicted for the environmental swabs and was consistently linked to
Firmicutes
, while increases in pathways related to amino acid and lipid metabolism were predicted for the meat samples and were positively correlated with
Proteobacteria
. Our results highlighted the importance of the processing environment in contributing to the initial microbial levels of meat and clearly showed that the type of retail facility (LD or SD) did not apparently affect the contamination.
IMPORTANCE
The study provides an in-depth description of the microbiota of meat and meat processing environments. It highlights the importance of the environment as a contamination source of spoilage bacteria, and it shows that the size of the retail facility does not affect the level and type of contamination.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology