1. Bacterial metataxonomic analysis of industrial Spanish-style green table olive fermentations.
- Author
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López-García, Elio, Benítez-Cabello, Antonio, Rodríguez-Gómez, Francisco, Romero-Gil, Verónica, Garrido-Fernández, Antonio, Jiménez-Díaz, Rufino, and Arroyo-López, Francisco Noé
- Subjects
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FERMENTATION , *OLIVE , *LACTIC acid bacteria , *BACTERIAL population - Abstract
In this work, metataxonomic-compositional data analysis was applied to study the influence of inoculation, type of ecosystem (brine or fruit), and time of fermentation (0, 24, and 83 days) on the bacterial composition dynamic during industrial Manzanilla Spanish-style green table olive fermentations. Differences in the physicochemical and microbiological characteristics between inoculated and spontaneous fermentations were scarce, except for the high lactic acid bacteria population (>10 million CFU/g) in the inoculated olive biofilms. The metataxonomic analysis showed eight relevant taxa (Lactiplantibacillus, Vibrio, Halolactibacillus, Aerococcus, Catenococcus, Salinivibrio, Alkalibacterium, and Marinilactibacillus) and absence of pathogens, but the microbiota composition markedly changed throughout fermentation. At the process onset, the main genera were Vibrio, Halolactibacillus, Marinilactibacillus, and Alkalibacterium, while Lactiplantibacillus was almost absent. Regardless of inoculation, Lactiplantibacillus became the predominant genus as the fermentation progressed, albeit Vibrio, Marinilactibacillus, Alkalibacterium, and Halolactibacillus also persisted until the end of the process (but did not cause spoilage). Ferrimonas genus was detected for the first time in table olives, being found in 71% of the samples. Besides, there was more bacterial biodiversity in the brine ecosystem than olive biofilms. Overall, inoculation led to more homogenous and equilibrated bacterial populations at the end of the process. This study expands the knowledge on the bacterial population changes occurring during industrial table olive fermentation, the differences between populations in brines and biofilms, and the beneficial effects of inoculation for using table olives as a carrier of beneficial microorganisms. • Compositional analysis provided new insights of food metataxonomic data. • Low number of bacterial genera typifies green Spanish-style table olive processing. • Lactiplantibacillus became the predominant genera as the fermentation progressed. • Inoculation led to more homogenous bacterial populations at the end of the process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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