Effect of isothermal and non-isothermal treatments on the viability and stress response of foodborne pathogen and spoilage microorganisms
- HUERTAS BAQUERO, JUAN PABLO
- Alfredo Palop Gómez Zuzendaria
- Arturo Esnoz Nicuesa Zuzendarikidea
Defentsa unibertsitatea: Universidad Politécnica de Cartagena
Fecha de defensa: 2015(e)ko urria-(a)k 30
- Santiago Condón Usón Presidentea
- Pablo Salvador Fernández Escámez Idazkaria
- Martin Wickham Kidea
Mota: Tesia
Laburpena
Heat treatment is used to produce safe and shelf stable foods and to eliminate pathogenic microorganisms. It is important to ensure that the food is adequately heat treated and to reduce post-processing contamination. The two most important issues connected with thermal processing are food safety and food quality. There are many conflicts between safety and quality issues. For example, microbial inactivation and food safety is increased by more severe heating conditions, but product quality in general deteriorates. Microbial heat resistance determination performed under isothermal treatments help to set thermal treatments according to the microbial load of the food product being processed. However, industrial thermal treatments involve three distinct stages: heating, holding and cooling, and all three stages may contribute to the microbial inactivation. However, procedures are needed to evaluate the behavior of the microorganisms under a complete (three stages) and during each stage individually. It has been believed that microbial inactivation follows a linear relationship, between the decimal logarithm of the number of surviving microorganisms and the treatment time at a given temperature, but in many cases the obtained survival curves from thermal treatments show a non-linear relationship. In this case, lineal models are no longer valid, and non-lineal models, such as the one derived from the Weibull distribution, should be used. The advantage of the Weibull model is its simplicity, flexibility and its hardiness, giving the possibility of modeling linear and non-linear survival curves, Also it is important to determine the response of microorganisms to inactivation treatments. Heat and other lethal agents cause damage to macromolecular cell components; thus the main function of stress proteins is to repair or destroy these damaged components so they do not disrupt cellular metabolism. The heat-shock response is characterized by the induction of a large set of proteins as a result of a rapid increase in the environmental temperature. The demand by consumers for high quality foods having “fresh” or “natural” characteristics has led to the development of foods that are preserved using mild technologies. Since microbial growth may occur at refrigeration temperatures, additional barriers (hurdles) are required to control spoilage and pathogenic microorganisms. The hurdle technology is the use of combined preservation factors (i.e. temperature, water activity, pH) for gentle, but effective, preservation of a variety of foods. To assure the microbiological safety and stability of healthful foods, it is necessary to apply balanced hurdles, achieving a hostile environment to inhibit their growth, shorten their survival or kill them, while not damaging the product’s sensory and nutritional properties. The objectives of this thesis were to i) evaluate the effect of natural antimicrobial compounds in combination with thermal treatments, on the survival and recovery of Alicyclobacillus acidoterrestris spores., ii) design and develop a continuous heating system equipment at pilot plant scale and validate it by comparing the resutls with those obtained with a reference equipment, iii) evaluate the thermal resistance and the behavior of Cronobacter sakazakii in Powder Infant Formula and under different temperatures, reconstitution and handling scenarios and iv) determine the genes that could be involved in the heat resistance of C. sakzakii. The addition of nisin and citral to the heating or recovery medium in combination with a mild thermal treatment (95ºC) for the control of A. acidoterrestris has been tested. The application of a thermal treatment at 95ºC for 2.5 min, followed by the recovery of the survivors in presence of nisin (0.3 mg L-1) and citral (0.34 mM) could inhibit the germination or outgrowth of almost 4 log cycles of A. acidoterrestris spores, reducing the risk of spoilage by this microorganism. When nisin and citral were added to the heating medium no decrease on the D values was found. Even more, when citral was added an increase of about a 40% in the D95 value of A. acidoterrestris spores was observed, leading to point that oily compounds could protect the microorganisms against thermal treatments effects. The right application of the hurdles is not the only parameter to be determined. Accurate calculation of thermal inactivation kinetics is very important to determine the treatment time and temperature to apply. The classic D values were used to determine the inactivation kinetics of A. acidoterrestris because it followed a linear relationship at all the temperatures tested. On the other hand, the inactivation kinetics of C. sakazakii did not show a linear relationship. This microorganism presented a tailing phenomenon, so the classic D value is not accurate to describe its thermal resistance. Similar results were found for S. auereus and Salmonella Senftenberg. Calculations of the thermal resistance for these microorganisms were done by applying the Weibull model. The use of this model resulted in a better calculation of the heat resistance under isothermal treatments, which is necessary in order to predict accurately the behavior of microorganisms under non-isothermal treatments. Nowadays many products are processed in continuous heating systems due to their many advantages. The most common methods used to determine the effect of non-isothermal treatments on the heat inactivation of the microorganisms use batch heating systems (i.e. thermoresistometer Mastia, open vials, capillary tubes) to mimic industrial continuous heat treatments. Some authors have used tubular heat exchangers, but these equipments just enable to measure temperature and take samples at the inlet and outlet of the process. These methods do not allow to know the temperature profile and the inactivation kinetics of the microorganisms during the process. Therefore, the effect of the heating rates on microorganism inactivation and the behavior of the microbial population inside the continuous heating system is on a black-box. A double tube concurrent flow tubular heat exchanger at pilot plant scale was designed and built in this investigation. This equipment provides reliable information about the heating profile during the whole process, permitting to know the heating rate in each section of the equipment, as well as to take samples during the whole process enabling to plot reliable survival curves. In order to validate the modified heat exchanger, results of S. aureus and S. Senftenberg. For both microorganisms, lower levels of survivors were found at the end of the thermal treatment in the heat exchanger. The treatment temperature in the heat exchanger in some points was slightly higher than in the thermoresistometer, and this could lead to the higher inactivation in the heat exchanger than in the thermoresistometer. Transposon mutagenesis allowed the identification of some of the molecular mechanisms involved in the response of C. sakazakii DPC6529 to heat stress. A transposon mutants library with a total of 2,400 mutants was screened. After a selection step, 28 mutants were found to show a significant decrease in heat resistance as compared to the wild type. These mutants were tested in the thermoresistometer, and only two of them (mutants 7 and 10) showed a significantly higher sensitivity to heat, when compared to the wild type. Disrupted genes identified for mutant 7 and 10 encoded the ribosome maturation protein RimP and outer membrane porin L (OmpL), respectively. Results suggest that de novo protein synthesis, and the uptake of cysteine for the formation of disulfide bonds in proteins for its stabilization, are key processes on heat resistance. The use of the hurdle technology is not just based on the addition of the hurdles, but is based in how to add the hurdles to achieve the best effect on the product safety and preservation. As shown for A. acidoterrestis, the addition of nisin and citral after a thermal treatment, led to greater inactivation of the microorganism, enabling to reduce the exposure time to the treatment. It has been shown that the use of adequate models to describe the heat resistance of microorganisms leads to a proper calculation of the thermal treatments intended to be applied for food preservation, avoiding over or under processing of food products. The heat exchanger used in this investigation permit to better understand the inactivation kinetics of microorganisms under continuous heating process, allowing to determine the effect of industrial treatments under a more realistic scenario. The current study also shed a light in the molecular mechanisms involved in the cellular response of C. sakazakii to thermal treatments, suggesting that de novo protein synthesis and cysteine uptake for protein stabilization are key process in the heat resistance of this microorganism