Effect of Environmental Factors on Intra-Specific Inhibitory Activity of Carnobacterium maltaromaticum
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 10:19authored byPeipei Zhang, Mandeep Kaur, John Bowman, David Ratkowsky, Mark Tamplin
Carnobacterium maltaromaticum is frequently associated with foods having extended
shelf-life due to its inhibitory activity to other bacteria. The quantification of such inhibition
interactions affected by various environmental factors is limited. This study investigated the effect of
environmental factors relevant to vacuum-packaged beef on inhibition between two model isolates
of C. maltaromaticum, D0h and D8c, specifically D8c sensitivity to D0h inhibition and D0h inhibitor
production. The effects of temperature (1, 7, 15, 25 C), atmosphere (aerobic and anaerobic),
pH (5.5, 6, 6.5), lactic acid (0, 25, 50 mM) and glucose (0, 0.56, 5.55 mM) on D8c sensitivity (diameter
of an inhibition zone) were measured. The effects of pH, glucose, lactic acid and atmosphere on
D0h inhibitor production were measured at 25 C. Sensitivity of D8c was the highest at 15 C,
under aerobic atmosphere, at higher concentrations of undissociated lactic acid and glucose, and
at pH 5.5 (p < 0.001). pH significantly affected D0h inhibitor production (p < 0.001), which was
the highest at pH 6.5. The effect of lactic acid depended upon pH level; at relatively low pH (5.5),
lactic acid decreased the production rate (arbitrary inhibition unit (AU)/mL/h). This study provides
a quantitative description of intra-species interactions, studied in in vitro environments that are
relevant to vacuum-packaged beef.