University of Parma, Department of Food Science, Parco Area delle Scienze 49/A, 43124 Parma, Italy.
University of Parma, Department of Food Science, Parco Area delle Scienze 49/A, 43124 Parma, Italy.
Food Microbiol. 2017 Aug;65:160-169. doi: 10.1016/j.fm.2017.02.005. Epub 2017 Feb 12.
Artisanal Minas cheese is produced in Minas Gerais state, Brazil and its varieties are named according to their geographical origin (Serro, Canastra, Serra do Salitre, Araxá and Campo das Vertentes). The cheese is produced with raw cow's milk and the whey from the previous cheese production ("pingo"). The high economic and cultural importance of artisanal cheese in Brazil justifies the efforts to ensure its safety, quality and provenance. This study aimed to characterize the microbial diversity composition, and geographical distribution of artisanal Minas cheese, focusing on the characterization of its autochthonous lactic acid bacteria (LAB) microbiota. Artisanal Minas cheese varieties from Serro, Canastra, Serra do Salitre, Araxá and Campo das Vertentes were analyzed by culture-dependent (culturing and LAB sequencing) and -independent (repetitive extragenic palindromic-PCR (rep-PCR) and length heterogeneity-PCR, LH-PCR) methods to characterize the microbiota. The microbial counts were variable between cheese samples, and some samples presented high number of coagulase positive bacteria and coliforms that may be associated with hygienic issues. In all samples was observed a prevalence of LAB. 16S rRNA sequencing and rep-PCR of the LAB strains identified four genus (Lactobacillus, Lactococcus, Enterococcus and Weissella), ten species and more than one strain per species. Lactobacillus was the most prevalent genera in all the cheeses. LH-PCR revealed a further six genera and ten species that were not identified by culturing, highlighting the importance of combining both culture-dependent and -independent methods to fully characterize microbiota diversity. Principal component analysis of the LH-PCR data and cluster analysis of rep-PCR data revealed that the artisanal Minas cheese microbiota was influenced not only by their geographical origin but also by the cheese farm. The lack of standardization in the milking and cheese manufacturing procedures between artisanal cheese farms could explain the microbial diversity.
手工 Minas 奶酪产于巴西米纳斯吉拉斯州,其品种根据其地理起源命名(塞罗、卡纳斯特拉、盐岭山、阿拉萨和坎波达斯韦尔滕斯)。这种奶酪是用生牛奶和前一种奶酪生产的乳清(“pingo”)制成的。手工奶酪在巴西具有很高的经济和文化重要性,这证明了努力确保其安全性、质量和产地的合理性。本研究旨在对手工 Minas 奶酪的微生物多样性组成及其地理分布进行特征描述,重点是对其土著乳酸菌(LAB)菌群进行特征描述。通过依赖培养(培养和 LAB 测序)和非依赖培养(重复外回文多态性-PCR(rep-PCR)和长度异质性-PCR,LH-PCR)方法分析了来自塞罗、卡纳斯特拉、盐岭山、阿拉萨和坎波达斯韦尔滕斯的手工 Minas 奶酪品种,以对微生物群进行特征描述。奶酪样本之间的微生物计数存在差异,一些样本中存在大量凝固酶阳性细菌和大肠菌群,这可能与卫生问题有关。在所有样本中均观察到 LAB 的存在。16S rRNA 测序和 LAB 菌株的 rep-PCR 鉴定出四个属(乳杆菌属、乳球菌属、肠球菌属和魏斯氏菌属)、十个种和每个种的多个菌株。在所有奶酪中,乳杆菌属是最常见的属。LH-PCR 显示了另外六个属和十个种,这些种不能通过培养鉴定,这突出了结合依赖培养和非依赖培养方法来充分描述微生物多样性的重要性。LH-PCR 数据的主成分分析和 rep-PCR 数据的聚类分析表明,手工 Minas 奶酪的微生物群不仅受其地理起源的影响,还受奶酪农场的影响。手工奶酪农场在挤奶和奶酪生产过程中缺乏标准化可能解释了微生物多样性。