Impact of pH and High-Pressure Pasteurization on the Germination and Development of Spores under Hyperbaric Storage versus Refrigeration.

Foods

Associated Laboratory for Green Chemistry of the Network of Chemistry and Technology (LAQV-REQUIMTE), Department of Chemistry, University of Aveiro, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal.

Published: June 2024


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Article Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate hyperbaric storage at room temperature (75-200 MPa, 30 days, 18-23 °C, HS/RT) on spores in brain-heart infusion broth (BHI-broth) at pH 4.50, 6.00, and 7.50 and coconut water (pH 5.40). Both matrices were also pasteurized by high pressure processing (600 MPa, 3 min, 17 °C, HPP) to simulate commercial pasteurization followed by HS, in comparison with refrigeration (5 °C, RF). The results showed that, at AP/RT, spores' development occurred, except at pH 4.50 in BHI-broth, while for RF, no changes occurred along storage. Under HS, at pH 4.50, neither spore development nor inactivation occurred, while at pH 6.00/7.50, inactivation occurred (≈2.0 and 1.0 logs at 200 MPa, respectively). Coconut water at AP/RT faced an increase of 1.6 logs of spores after 15 days, while for RF, no spore development occurred, while the inactivation of spores under HS happened (≈3 logs at 200 MPa). HPP prior to HS seems to promote a subsequent inactivation of spores in BHI-broth at pH 4.50, which is less evident for other pHs. For HPP coconut water, the inactivation levels under HS were lower (≈2.0 logs at 200 MPa). The Weibull model well described the inactivation pattern observed. These results suggest that HS/RT can be simultaneously used as a tool to avoid spores' development, as well as for its inactivation, without the application of high temperatures that are required to inactivate these spores.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11202566PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods13121832DOI Listing

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