Food Microbiology
The
ability of microorganisms (except viruses) to grow or multiply in a food is
determined by the food environment as well as the environment in which the food
is stored, designated as the intrinsic and extrinsic environment of food, respectively.
It is not possible to study the influence of any one factor on growth
independently as the factors are interrelated. Instead, the influence of any one
factor at different levels on growth is compared keeping other factors
unchanged. The influence of these factors is discussed here.
INTRINSIC FACTORS OR FOOD ENVIRONMENT
Intrinsic factors of a food
include nutrients, growth factors, and inhibitors (or anti- microbials), water
activity, pH, and oxidation–reduction potential. The influence of each factor on
growth is discussed separately. But, as indicated previously, in a food system
the factors are present together and exert effects on microbial growth in
combination, either favorably or adversely.
A.
Nutrients and Growth
Microbial growth is accomplished
through the synthesis of cellular components and energy. The necessary
nutrients for this process are derived from the immediate environment of a
microbial cell and, if the cell is growing in a food, it supplies the
nutrients. These nutrients include carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, minerals,
and vitamins. Water is not considered a nutrient, but it is essential as a
medium for the biochemical reactions necessary for the synthesis of cell mass
and energy. All foods contain these five major nutrient groups, either naturally
or added, and the amount of each nutrient varies greatly with the type of food.
Microorganisms normally present in food vary greatly in nutrient requirements,
with bacteria requiring the most, followed by yeasts and molds. Microorganisms
also differ greatly in their ability to utilize large and complex carbohydrates
(e.g., starch and cellulose), large proteins (e.g., casein in milk), and
lipids. Microorganisms capable of using these molecules do so by producing
specific extracellular enzymes (or exoenzymes) and hydrolyzing the complex
molecules to simpler forms outside before transporting them inside the cell.
Molds are the most capable of doing this. However, this provides an opportunity
for a species to grow in a mixed population even when it is incapable of
metabolizing the complex molecules. Microbial cells, following death and lysis,
release intracellular enzymes that can also catalyze break- down of complex
food nutrients to simpler forms, which can then be utilized by other microorganisms.
B.
Growth Factors and Inhibitors in Food
Foods can also have some factors
that either stimulate growth or adversely affect growth of microorganisms. The
exact nature of growth factors is not known, but they are naturally present in
some foods. An example is the growth factors in tomatoes that stimulate growth
of some Lactobacillus species. These factors can be added to raw materials
during food bio processing or to media to isolate some fastidious bacteria from
foods. Foods also contain many chemicals, either naturally or added, that
adversely affect microbial growth. Some of the natural inhibitors are lysozyme
in egg, agglutinin in milk, and eugenol in cloves. The inhibitors, depending on
their mode of action, can prevent or reduce growth of and kill microorganisms.
C.
Water Activity and Growth
The free water in a food is
necessary for microbial growth. It is necessary to transport nutrients and
remove waste materials, carry out enzymatic reactions, synthesize cellular
materials, and take part in other biochemical reactions, such as hydrolysis of
a polymer to monomers (proteins to amino acids). Each microbial species (or
group) has an optimum, maximum, and minimum Aw level for growth. The Aw of food
ranges from ca. 0.1 to 0.99. The Aw values of some food groups are as follows:
cereals, crackers, sugar, salt, dry milk, 0.10 to 0.20; noodles, honey,
chocolate, dried egg, <0.60; jam, jelly, dried fruits, parmesan cheese,
nuts, 0.60 to 0.85; fermented sausage, dry cured meat, sweetened condensed milk,
maple syrup, 0.85 to 0.93; evaporated milk, tomato paste, bread, fruit juices,
salted fish, sausage, processed cheese, 0.93 to 0.98; and fresh meat, fish,
fruits, vegetables, milk, eggs, 0.98 to 0.99. The Aw of foods can be reduced by
removing water (desorption) and increased by the adsorption of water.
D.
pH and Growth
pH indicates the hydrogen ion
concentrations in a system and is expressed as –log [H+], the negative
logarithm of the hydrogen ion or proton concentration. It ranges from 0 to 14,
with 7.0 being neutral pH. [H+] concentrations can differ in a system,
depending on what acid is present. Some strong acids used in foods, such as HCl
and phosphoric acid, dissociate completely. Weak acids, such as acetic or
lactic acids, remain in equilibrium with the dissociated and undissociated
forms:
[HCl]à[H+] + [Cl–], pH of 0.1 N HCl
is 1.1
CH3 COOHà [H+] + [CH3COO–], pH of 0.1 N
CH3COOH is 2.9
Acidity is inversely related to
pH: a system with high acidity has a low pH, and vice versa.
Depending on the type, the pH of
a food can vary greatly. On the basis of pH, foods can be grouped as high-acid
foods (pH below 4.6) and low-acid foods (pH 4.6 and above). Most fruits, fruit
juices, fermented foods (from fruits, vegetables, meat, and milk), and salad
dressings are high-acid (low-pH) foods, whereas most vegetables, meat, fish,
milk, and soups are low-acid (high-pH) foods. Tomato, however, is a high-acid
vegetable (pH 4.1 to 4.4). The higher pH limit of most low-acid foods remains
below 7.0; only in a few foods, such as clams (pH 7.1) and egg albumen (pH
8.5), does the pH exceed 7.0. Similarly, the low pH limit of most high-acid
foods remains above 3.0, except in some citrus fruits (lemon, lime, grapefruit)
and cranberry juice, in which the pH can be as low as 2.2. The acid in the
foods can either be present naturally (as in fruits), produced during
fermentation (as in fermented foods), or added during processing (as in salad
dressings). Foods can also have compounds that have a buffering capacity. A
food such as milk or meat, because of good buffering capacity, does not show pH
reduction when compared with a vegetable product in the presence of the same
amount of acid.
The pH of a food has a profound
effect on the growth and viability of microbial cells. Each species has an
optimum and a range of pH for growth. In general, molds and yeasts are able to
grow at lower pH than do bacteria, and Gram-negative bacteria are more
sensitive to low pH than are Gram-positive bacteria. The pH range of growth for
molds is 1.5 to 9.0; for yeasts, 2.0 to 8.5; for Gram-positive bacteria, 4.0 to
8.5; and for Gram-negative bacteria, 4.5 to 9.0. Individual species differ
greatly in lower pH limit for growth; for example, Pediococcus acidilactici can grow at pH 3.8 but normally
Salmonella cannot. The lower pH limit of growth of a species can be a little
higher if the pH is adjusted with strong acid instead of a weak acid (due to
its undissociated molecules). Acid-resistant or tolerant strains can acquire
resistance to lower pH compared with the other strains of a species (e.g.,
acid-resistant Salmonella). When the pH in a food is reduced below the lower
limit for growth of a microbial species, the cells not only stop growing but
also lose viability, the rate of which depends on the extent of pH reduction.
E.
Redox Potential, Oxygen, and Growth
The process involves the loss of
electrons from a reduced substance (thus it is oxidized) and the gain of
electrons by an oxidized substance (thus it is reduced). The electron donor,
because it reduces an oxidized substance, is also called a reducing agent.
Similarly, the electron recipient is called an oxidizing agent. The redox
potential, designated as Eh, is measured in electrical units of mill volts
(mV). In the oxidized range, it is expressed in +mV, and in reduced range in
–mV. In biological systems, the oxidation and reduction of substances are the
primary means of generating energy. If free oxygen is present in the system,
then it can act as an electron acceptor. In the absence of free oxygen, oxygen
bound to some other compound, such as NO3 and SO4, can accept the electron. In
a system where no oxygen is present, other compounds can accept the electrons.
Thus, presence of oxygen is not a requirement of O–R reactions.
The redox potential of a food is influenced
by its chemical composition, specific processing treatment given, and its
storage condition (in relation to air). Fresh foods of plant and animal origin
are in a reduced state, because of the presence of reducing substances such as
ascorbic acid, reducing sugars, and –SH group of proteins.
On the basis of their growth in
the presence and absence of free oxygen, microorganisms have been grouped as
aerobes, anaerobes, facultative anaerobes, or microaerophiles. Aerobes need
free oxygen for energy generation, as the free oxygen acts as the final electron
acceptor through aerobic respiration. Facultative anaerobes can generate energy
if free oxygen is available, or they can use bound oxygen in compounds such as
NO3 or SO4 as final electron acceptors through anaerobic respiration. If oxygen
is not available, then other compounds are used to accept the electron (or
hydrogen) through (anaerobic) fermentation. An example of this is the
acceptance of hydrogen from NADH2 by pyruvate to produce lactate. Anaerobic and
facultative anaerobic microorganisms can only transfer electrons through
fermentation. Many anaerobes (obligate or strict anaerobes) cannot grow in the
presence of even small amounts of free oxygen as they lack the super- oxide
dismutase necessary to scavenge the toxic oxygen free radicals. Addition of
scavengers, such as thiols (e.g., thiolglycolate), helps overcome the
sensitivity to these free radicals. Microaerophiles grow better in the presence
of less oxygen. Growth of microorganisms and their ability to generate energy
by the specific metabolic reactions depend on the redox potential of foods. The
Eh range at which different groups of microorganisms can grow are as follows:
aerobes, +500 to +300 mV; facultative anaerobes, +300 to +100 mV; and anaerobes,
+100 to –250 mV or lower. However, this varies greatly with concentrations of
reducing components in a food and the presence of oxygen. Molds, yeasts, and
Bacillus, Pseudomonas, Moraxella, and Micrococcus genera are some examples that
have aerobic species. Some examples of facultative anaerobes are the lactic
acid bacteria and those in the family Enterobacteriaceae. The most important
anaerobe in food is Clostridium. An example of a microaerophile is
Campylobacter spp.
III.
EXTRINSIC FACTORS
Extrinsic factors important in
microbial growth in a food include the environmental conditions in which it is
stored. These are temperature, relative humidity, and gaseous environment. The
relative humidity and gaseous condition of storage, respectively, influence the
Aw and Eh of the food. The influence of these two factors on microbial growth
has been discussed previously. In this section, the influence of storage
temperature of food on microbial growth is discussed.
A.
Temperature and Growth
Microbial growth is accomplished
through enzymatic reactions. It is well known that within a certain range, with
every 10rC rise in temperature, the catalytic rate of an enzyme doubles.
Similarly, the enzymatic reaction rate is reduced to half by decreasing the
temperature by 10rC. This relationship changes beyond the growth range. Because
temperature influences enzyme reactions, it has an important role in microbial
growth in food.
Foods are exposed to different
temperatures from the time of production until consumption. Depending on
processing conditions, a food can be exposed to high heat, from 65rC (roasting
of meat) to more than 100rC (in ultrahigh temperature processing). For
long-term storage, a food can be kept at 5rC (refrigeration) to –20rC or below
(freezing). Some relatively stable foods are also kept between 10 and 35rC
(cold to ambient temperature). Some ready-to-eat foods are kept at warm
temperature (50r to 60rC) for several hours (e.g., in the supermarket deli).
Different temperatures are also used to stimulate desirable microbial growth in
food fermentation.
Microorganisms important in foods
are divided into three groups on the basis of their temperature of growth, each
group having an optimum temperature and a temperature range of growth: (1)
thermophiles (grow at relatively high temperature), with optimum ca. 55rC and
range 45 to 70rC; (2) mesophiles (grow at ambient temperature), with optimum at
35rC and range 10 to 45rC; and (3) psychrophiles (grow at cold temperature),
with optimum at 15rC and range –5 to 20rC. Two other terms used in food
microbiology are very important with respect to microbial growth at
refrigerated temperature and survival of microorganisms to low heat treatment
or pasteurization, because both methods are widely used in the storage and
processing of foods. Psychrotrophs are microorganisms that grow at refrigerated
temperature (0 to 5rC), irrespective of their optimum range of growth
temperature. They usually grow rapidly between 10 and 30rC. Molds; yeasts; many
Gram- negative bacteria from genera Pseudomonas, Achromobacter; and
Gram-positive bacteria from genera Leuconostoc, Lactobacillus, Bacillus,
Clostridium, and Listeria are included in this group. Microorganisms that
survive pasteurization temperature are designated as thermodurics. They include
species from genera Micrococcus, Bacillus, Clostridium, Lactobacillus,
Pediococcus, and Enterococcus. Bacterial spores are also included in this
group. They have different growth temperatures and many can grow at
refrigerated temperature as well as thermophilic temperature. When the foods
are exposed to temperatures beyond the maximum and minimum temperatures of
growth, microbial cells die rapidly at higher temperatures and relatively
slowly at lower temperatures. Microbial growth and viability are important
considerations in reducing food spoilage and enhancing safety against
pathogens, as well as in food bioprocessing. Temperature of growth is also
effectively used in the laboratory to enumerate and isolate microorganisms from
foods.
Relative
Humidity of Environment
The RH of the storage environment
is important both from the standpoint of aw within foods and the growth of
microorganisms at the surfaces. When the aw of a food is set at 0.60, it is
important that this food be stored under conditions of RH that do not allow the
food to pick up moisture from the air and thereby increase its own surface and
subsurface aw to a point where microbial growth can occur. When foods with low
&„ values are placed in environments of high RH, the foods pick up moisture
until equilibrium has been established. Likewise, foods with a high aw lose
moisture when placed in an environment of low RH. There is a relationship
between RH and temperature that should be borne in mind in selecting proper
storage environments for foods. In general, the higher the temperature, the
lower the RH, and vice versa. Foods that undergo surface spoilage from molds,
yeasts, and certain bacteria should be stored under conditions of low RH.
Improperly wrapped meats such as whole chickens and beef cuts tend to suffer
much surface spoilage in the refrigerator before deep spoilage occurs, due to
the generally high RH of the refrigerator and the fact that the meat-spoilage
biota is essentially aerobic in nature. Although it is possible to lessen the
chances of surface spoilage in certain foods by storing under low conditions of RH, it should be remembered that the food itself will lose moisture to the
atmosphere under such conditions and thereby become undesirable. In selecting
the proper environmental conditions of RH, consideration must be given to both
the possibility of surface growth and the desirable quality to be maintained in
the foods in question. By altering the gaseous atmosphere, it is possible to
retard surface spoilage without lowering the RH.
Presence
and Concentration of Gases in the Environment
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the
single most important atmospheric gas that is used to control microorganisms in
foods. Ozone (O3) is the other atmospheric gas that has antimicrobial
properties, and it has been tried over a number of decades as an agent to
extend the shelf life of certain foods. It has been shown to be effective against
a variety of microorganisms, but because it is a strong oxidizing agent, it
should not be used on high-lipid-content foods since it would cause an increase
in rancidity.
The physical and
chemical environments control microbial growth within the growth range mainly
by influencing their metabolic process associated with synthesis of energy and
cellular components. Beyond the growth range, these factors, either
individually or in combination, can be used to control microbial growth and
even to destroy them. Actual growth is accomplished through the metabolism of
various nutrients present in a food. The processes by which the food nutrients
are transported inside the microbial cells and then metabolized to produce
energy, cellular molecules, and by-products. Ozone was tested against
Escherichia coli 0157:H7 in culture media, and at 3 to 18 ppm the bacterium was
destroyed in 20 to 50 min- utes.16 The gas was administered from an ozone
generator and on tryptic soy agar, the D value for 18 ppm was 1.18 minutes, but
in phosphate buffer, the D value was 3.18 minutes. To achieve a 99% inactivation
of about 10,000 cysts of Giardia lamblia per milliliter, the average concentration
time was found to be 0.17 and 0.53 mg- min/L at 25°C and 5°C, respectively.77
The protozoan was about three times more sensitive to O3 at 25°C than at 5°C.
It is allowed in foods in Australia, France, and Japan; and in 1997 it was
accorded GRAS (generally regarded as safe) status in the United States for food
use. Overall, O3 levels of 0.15 to 5.00 ppm in air have been shown to inhibit
the growth of some spoilage bacteria as well as yeasts.
Food
Preservation
The term food
preservation refers to any one of a number of techniques used to prevent food
from spoiling. The following are the general methods of food preservation: application of heat, such as canning and preserving, pasteurization,
evaporation, sun-drying, dehydration and smoking, application of cold, as ill
cold storage, refrigeration and freezing, the use of chemical substances such as salt,
sugar, vinegar, benzoic and lactic acids,
fermentation, examples being acetic, lactic, alcoholic, etc., such mechanical
means as vacuum, filtration and clarification processes, devices or agents for
preventing chemical deterioration or bacteriological spoilage (the use
of oil, paraffin and water glass are included here),
combinations of two or more of the above.
Food
preservation has become an increasingly important component of the food
industry as fewer people eat foods produced on their own lands, and as
consumers expect to be able to purchase and consume foods that are out of
season.
Food spoilage
can be attributed to one of two major causes: the attack by pathogens (disease-causing
microorganisms) such as bacteria and molds, or
oxidation that causes the destruction of essential biochemical
compounds and/or the destruction of plant and animal cells. The various food preserving methods are all
designed to reduce or eliminate one or the other (or both) of these causative
agents.
For example, a
simple and common method of preserving food is by heating it to some minimum
temperature. This process prevents or retards spoilage because high
temperatures kill or inactivate most kinds of pathogens. The addition of
compounds known as BHA (butylated hydroxyanisole) and BHT (butylated
hydroxytoluene) to foods also prevents spoilage in another different way. These
compounds are known to act as antioxidants, preventing chemical reactions which
cause the oxidation of food resulting in its spoilage. Among the most primitive forms of food
preservation that are still in use today are such methods as smoking, drying,
salting, freezing, and fermenting.
Because most
disease-causing organisms require a moist environment in which to survive and
multiply, drying is a natural technique for preventing spoilage. Leaving foods
out in the sun and wind to dry out is probably one of the earliest forms of
food preservation. Evidence of the drying of meats, fish, fruits, and
vegetables also go back to the earliest recorded human.
Vacuum drying is a form of
preservation in which a food is placed in a large container from which air is
removed. Water vapor pressure within the food is greater than that outside of
it, and water evaporates more quickly from the food than in a normal
atmosphere. Vacuum drying is biologically desirable since some enzymes that
cause oxidation of foods become active during normal air drying. These enzymes
do not appear to be as active under vacuum drying conditions, however. Two of
the special advantages of vacuum drying are that the process is more efficient
at removing water from a food product, and it takes place more quickly than air
drying.
Spray drying is
the process during which concentrated solution of coffee in water is sprayed
through a disk with many small holes in it. The surface area of the original
coffee grounds is increased many times, making dehydration of the dry product
much more efficient. Freeze-drying is a method of preservation that makes use
of the physical principle known as sublimation, the process by which a solid
passes directly to the gaseous phase without first melting. Freeze-drying is a
desirable way of preserving food because at low temperatures (commonly around
–10°C to –25°C) chemical reactions take place very slowly and pathogens have
difficulty surviving. The food to be preserved by this method is first frozen
and then placed into a vacuum chamber. Water in the food freezes and then
sublimes, leaving the moisture content in the final product of as low as
0.5%.
The precise
mechanism by which salting preserves food is not entirely understood. It is
known that salt binds with water molecules and thus acts as a dehydrating agent
in foods. A high level of salinity may also impair the conditions under which
pathogens can survive. The value of adding salt to foods for preservation has
been well known for centuries. Sugar appears to have effects similar to those
of salt in preventing spoilage of food. The use of either compound (and of
certain other natural materials) is known as curing.
Freezing is an
effective form of food preservation because the pathogens that cause food
spoilage are killed or do not grow very rapidly at reduced temperatures. The
process is less effective in food preservation than are thermal techniques such
as boiling because pathogens are more likely to be able to survive cold
temperatures than hot temperatures. One of the problems surrounding the use of
freezing as a method of food preservation is the danger that pathogens
deactivated (but not killed) by the process will once again become active when
the frozen food.
Fermentation is
a naturally occurring chemical reaction by which a natural food is converted
into another form by pathogens. It is a process in which food spoils, but
results in the formation of an edible product. Perhaps the best example of such
a food is cheese. Fresh milk does not remain in edible condition for a very
long period of time. Its pH is such that harmful pathogens begin to grow in it
very rapidly. Early humans discovered, however, that the spoilage of milk can
be controlled in such a way as to produce a new product, cheese. Bread is
another food product made by the process of fermentation. Flour, water, sugar,
milk, and other raw materials are mixed together with yeasts and then baked.
The addition of yeasts brings about the fermentation of sugars present in the
mixture, resulting in the formation of a product that will remain edible much
longer than will the original raw materials used in the bread-making
process.
Heating food is
an effective way of preserving it because the great majority of harmful
pathogens are killed at temperatures close to the boiling point of water. In
this respect, heating foods is a form of food preservation comparable to that
of freezing but much superior to it in its effectiveness. A preliminary step in
many other forms of food preservation, especially forms that make use of
packaging, is to heat the foods to temperatures sufficiently high to destroy
pathogens.
In many cases,
foods are actually cooked prior to their being packaged and stored. In other
cases, cooking is neither appropriate nor necessary. The most familiar example
of the latter situation is pasteurization. During the 1860s, the French
bacteriologist Louis Pasteur discovered that pathogens in foods could be destroyed
by heating those foods to a certain minimum temperature. The process was
particularly appealing for the preservation of milk since preserving milk by
boiling is not a practical approach. Conventional methods of pasteurization
called for the heating of milk to a temperature between 63 and 65°C for a
period of about 30 minutes, and then cooling it to room temperature. In a more
recent revision of that process, milk can also be "flash-pasteurized"
by raising its temperature to about 71°C for a minimum of 15 seconds, with
equally successful results. A process known as ultra-high-pasteurization uses
even higher temperatures, of the order of 90–130°C, for periods of a second or
more.
One of the most
common methods for preserving foods today is to enclose them in a sterile
container. The term canning refers to this method although the specific
container can be glass, plastic, or some other material as well as a metal can,
from which the procedure originally obtained its name. The basic principle
behind canning is that a food is sterilized, usually by heating, and then
placed within an air-tight container. In the absence of air, no new pathogens
can gain access to the sterilized food. In most canning operations, the food to
be packaged is first prepared in some way—cleaned, peeled, sliced, chopped, or
treated in some other way—and then placed directly into the container. The
container is then placed in hot water or some other environment where its
temperature is raised above the boiling point of water for some period of time.
This heating process achieves two goals at once. First, it kills the vast
majority of pathogens that may be present in the container. Second, it forces
out most of the air above the food in the container.
The commercial
packaging of foods frequently makes use of tin, aluminum, or other kinds of
metallic cans. The technology for this kind of canning was first developed in
the mid- 1800s, when individual workers hand-sealed cans after foods had been
cooked within.
The majority of
food preservation operations used today also employ some kind of chemical
additive to reduce spoilage. Some familiar examples of the former class of food
additives are sodium benzoate and benzoic acid; calcium, sodium propionate, and
propionic acid; calcium, potassium, sodium sorbate, and sorbic acid; and sodium
and potassium sulfite. Examples of the latter class of additives include
calcium, sodium ascorbate, and ascorbic acid (vitamin C); butylated
hydroxyanisole (BHA) and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT); lecithin; and sodium
and potassium sulfite and sulfur dioxide.
A special class
of additives that reduce oxidation is known as the sequestrants. Sequestrants
are compounds that "capture" metallic ions, such as those of copper,
iron, and nickel, and remove them from contact with foods. The removal of these
ions helps preserve foods because in their free state they increase the rate at
which oxidation of foods takes place. Some examples of sequestrants used as
food preservatives are ethylenediamine-tetraacetic acid (EDTA), citric acid,
sorbitol, and tartaric acid.
II.
MICROBIOLOGY OF FERMENTED FOODS
Food
fermentation involves a process in which raw materials are converted to
fermented foods by the growth and metabolic activities of the desirable
microorganisms. The microorganisms utilize some components present in the raw
materials as substrates to generate energy and cellular components, to increase
in population, and to produce many usable by-products (also called end
products) that are excreted in the environment. The unused components of the
raw materials and the microbial by-products (and sometimes microbial cells)
together constitute fermented foods. The raw materials can be milk, meat, fish,
vegetables, fruits, cereal grains, seeds, and beans, fermented individually or
in combination.
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