Elsevier

Food Microbiology

Volume 101, February 2022, 103892
Food Microbiology

Lytic bacteriophages UFJF_PfDIW6 and UFJF_PfSW6 prevent Pseudomonas fluorescens growth in vitro and the proteolytic-caused spoilage of raw milk during chilled storage

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2021.103892Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • P.fluorescens phages showed high host specificity and thermal and pH resistance.

  • UFJF_PfDIW6 and UFJF_PfSW6 phages reduced P. fluorescens in Milk-PBE medium.

  • The effect of these phages on P. fluorescens led to reduction in casein hydrolysis.

  • UFJF_PfDIW6 and UFJF_PfSW6 have great potential to prevent spoilage of raw milk.

Abstract

In this study, P. fluorescens-infecting phages were isolated, characterized, and evaluated to their potential to control the bacterial counts and, consequently, the proteolytic spoilage of raw milk during cold storage. The UFJF_PfDIW6 and UFJF_PfSW6 phages showed titers of 9.7 and 7.6 log PFU/ml; latent period of 115 and 25 min, and burst size of 145 and 25 PFU/infected cell, respectively. They also were highly specific to the host bacterium, morphologically classified as the Podoviridae family, stable at pH 5 to 11 and were not inactivated at 63 °C or 72 °C for 30 min. These phages found to be effective against P. fluorescens, reducing bacterial count throughout the entire exponential growth phase in broth formulated with milk at both 4 °C and 10 °C. This effect on bacteria growth led to inhibition by at least 2 days in proteases production, delaying the degradation of milk proteins. When applied together in raw milk stored at 4 °C, they reduced the total bacteria, psychrotrophic, and Pseudomonas by 3 log CFU/ml. This study's findings indicate that these phages have a great potential to prevent the growth of Pseudomonas and, consequently, to retard proteolytic spoilage of raw milk during chilled storage.

Keywords

Psychrotrophic bacteria
Milk spoilage
Dairy food
Shelf-life
Storage

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