Publications by authors named "Giulia Tabanelli"

Mediterranean officinal plants and spices are rich sources of bioactive compounds that can be used to improve the safety and quality of fresh food products. Among them, essential oils (EOs), known for their antimicrobial and antioxidant activities, can be a feasible solution for natural and healthy foods with low environmental impact. This study evaluates the bioactive potential of ten EOs derived from Mediterranean officinal plants and spices.

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Folate deficiency is a widespread nutritional issue, and biofortifying dairy products through lactic acid bacteria (LAB) is a promising strategy to enhance natural folate levels. This study aimed to develop a reliable method for selecting and subsp. strains with enhanced folate production for use as functional starter cultures.

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Fermented nut-based products, obtained after soaking and fermentation, are gaining increasing interest as animal food substitutes because of ethical, environmental and health reasons. In these products, Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) perform the fermentation, leading to matrix acidification and contributing to controlling spoilage and pathogenic microbiota. In this work, LAB strains isolated from an artisanal product and combined with a commercial strain were added as starter cultures during nut soaking to produce a cheese-like fermented plant-based product.

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Article Synopsis
  • Companilactobacillus alimentarius is a lactic acid bacterium found in various fermented foods, particularly Spanish sausages, where it performs important roles in fermentation.
  • There is limited ecological and safety information available about this species, particularly regarding its antibiotic resistance and phenotypic traits.
  • Research involving 14 C. alimentarius strains from Mediterranean sausages revealed significant variability in traits like biogenic amine production and growth under different environmental conditions, supporting its adaptation and presence in fermented meat products.
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  • Two indigenous LAB strains (BPF2 and ST6) from Spanish fermented sausages were tested in pilot plants for their technological and anti-listerial properties, compared to a commercial starter and a control spontaneous fermentation.
  • The study evaluated various parameters, showing that the native starters not only reduced biogenic amines and rancidity levels but also demonstrated better inhibitory effects against harmful bacteria.
  • This research suggests the potential of these autochthonous strains to enhance the safety, quality, and uniqueness of traditional Spanish fermented sausages within the meat industry.
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Fermentation is one of the most ancient strategies to improve safety and extend shelf-life of the products. Starter cultures are mainly represented by lactic acid bacteria (LAB), which may also be bioprotective agents controlling the fermentation process, the native microbiota and pathogen outgrowth. This work aimed to select new LAB strains from spontaneously fermented sausages produced in different areas of Italy, which can be effective as starter cultures and bioprotective agents in fermented salami.

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  • The increasing popularity of avocados is generating significant agro waste, which contains health-beneficial bioactive compounds.
  • Various methods can recover these compounds, with lactic acid fermentation proving effective in enhancing their nutritional value.
  • In this study, fermenting avocado leaves with specific lactic acid bacteria led to the identification of 15 new phenolic compounds and significant increases in antioxidant activity, demonstrating the potential for using agro waste in functional foods and nutraceuticals.
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  • Enterococci are problematic due to their presence in food products and their ability to cause health issues through biogenic amines (BAs) production, making it essential to find effective preservation methods.
  • The study tested the antimicrobial effects of blackberry leaves and prickly juniper needles, both as phenolic extracts and essential oils, against a tyramine-producing enterococcal strain, using various methods including HPLC and flow cytometry.
  • Results showed that essential oils had a significant antimicrobial effect, reducing bacterial growth and producing BAs, though some bacteria could recover over time, indicating that more research is needed to explore these findings in real food environments.
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Seafood products are one of the most perishable foods, and their shelf life is limited by enzymatic and microbial spoilage. Developing methods to extend the shelf life of fresh fish could reduce food waste in the fishery industry, retail stores, and private households. In recent decades, the application of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) as bioprotective cultures has become a promising tool.

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Fermented meat products represent an important industrial sector in Europe, particularly in the Mediterranean Countries (MC), where the presence of numerous local productions, still obtained through spontaneous fermentation, is recognized as a formidable treasure chest of unexplored microbial biodiversity. naturally occurring in fifteen spontaneously fermented sausages from MC (Italy, Spain, Croatia, and Slovenia) were isolated and taxonomically characterized using molecular techniques. Additionally, a safety assessment for the presence of antibiotic resistances and biogenic amine (BA) production was performed to determine their suitability as autochthonous starter cultures.

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  • The study analyzed the phenolic profiles, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties of hydroethanolic olive leaf extracts from six Mediterranean olive cultivars.
  • Different olive cultivars showed significant variability in total phenolic content, with the highest levels found in one specific cultivar, which also exhibited the strongest antioxidant activity.
  • While the olive leaf extracts demonstrated high antioxidant potential, they had limited antimicrobial effects, being ineffective against some bacteria but inhibiting others at higher concentrations.
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The aim of this work was to investigate the possibility to industrially produce fermented sausages without the addition of nitrate and nitrite. Indeed, despite their antimicrobial effect and multiple technological roles, an increasing pressure for their removal has recently raised. To achieve this goal while maintaining an acceptable final product quality, we deeply modified the whole process, that was carried out at 10-15 °C (i.

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The consumers' demand for safe foods without chemical additives increased the research for green solutions, based on natural antimicrobials. Plants can be an important source of bioactive compounds able to prevent the development of foodborne pathogens and spoilage microflora. This paper aimed to characterize phenolic extracts (PEs) and essential oils (EOs) obtained from Mediterranean Rubus fruticosus leaves and Juniperus oxycedrus needles and to evaluate their antimicrobial effects against Listeria monocytogenes Scott A.

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(), widely used as a starter culture in fermented sausages, is a species adapted to meat environments. Its ability to survive for a long time in such products is due to the exploitation of different metabolic pathways to gain energy (hexose and pentose sugar fermentation, amino acids catabolism, etc.).

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The underexplored biodiversity of seaweeds has recently drawn great attention from researchers to find the bioactive compounds that might contribute to the growth of the blue economy. In this study, we aimed to explore the effect of seasonal growth (from May to September) on the in vitro antioxidant (FRAP, DPPH, and ORAC) and antimicrobial effects (MIC and MBC) of collected in the Central Adriatic Sea. Algal compounds were analyzed by UPLC-PDA-ESI-QTOF, and TPC and TTC were determined.

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The wide array of spontaneously fermented sausages of the Mediterranean area can represent a reservoir of microbial biodiversity and can be an important source of new technological and functional strains able to preserve product properties, counteracting the impoverishment of their organoleptic typical features due to the introduction of commercial starter cultures. We analysed 15 artisanal salamis from Italy, Spain, Croatia and Slovenia to evaluate the microbiota composition, through culture-dependent and culture-independent techniques (i.e.

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Marine macroalgae are well known to release a wide spectrum of volatile organic components, the release of which is affected by environmental factors. This paper aimed to identify the essential oil (EO) compounds of the brown algae collected in the Adriatic Sea monthly, from May until August. EOs were isolated by hydrodistillation using a Clavenger-type apparatus and analyzed by gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry (GC-MS).

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In this study we investigated how cell origin could affect the efficacy of an antimicrobial treatment (mild heating combined with terpenoids) in Listeria monocytogenes Scott A, considering cells from: 1. single colony, 2. glycerol stock, 3.

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The work reports a case study describing how the competition wild microflora vs. starter cultures affects the final product characteristics. This study regards an industrial lot of , an Italian long-ripened traditional fermented sausages, produced using starter cultures.

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The contribution of food in promotion of health has become of most importance. The challenges that lie before the global food supply chain, such as climate changes, food contamination, and antimicrobial resistance may compromise food safety at international scale. Compounds with strong antimicrobial and antioxidant activity can be extracted from different natural and sustainable sources and may contribute to extend the shelf life of meat and seafood products, enhance food safety and enrich foods with additional biologically active and functional ingredients.

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In addition to pathogenic bacteria and viruses, some bioactive compounds and natural toxins such as biogenic amines (BAs) can be responsible for food poisoning. These compounds, produced mainly by bacteria through the action of decarboxylases, represent a risk for consumers' health and are involved in several pathogenic syndromes, with histamine and tyramine being the most dangerous ones. Since the presence of dangerous amounts of BAs is associated with the relevant growth of spoiling decarboxylating microorganisms, BA content has been proposed as a food quality index in fresh products.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focuses on a commercial strain used in fermented sausages, investigating its growth and metabolic responses to different sugar sources and concentrations.
  • Higher sugar levels led to better growth performance and organic acid accumulation, while lower sugar levels resulted in more dead and injured cells, particularly with ribose.
  • Key findings include the depletion of arginine and increased serine consumption at optimal sugar levels, providing insights for improving industrial fermentation processes.
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Food fermentation is one of the most ancient processes of food production that has historically been used to extend food shelf life and to enhance its organoleptic properties [...

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Pulsed electric field (PEF) treatment is a non-thermal technology that has shown good potential for microbial inactivation. However, in many cases, it cannot be sufficient to avoid microbial proliferation, and the combination with other stabilizing technologies is needed. In the framework of the hurdle concept, several researches have been focused on the use of PEF in combination with heat and/or antimicrobials to increase its efficacy.

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