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Mining the Factors Driving the Evolution of the Pit Mud Microbiome under the Impact of Long-Term Production of Strong-Flavor Baijiu

Authors :
Chai Lijuan
Su-Yi Zhang
Xiaojuan Zhang
Zhen-Ming Lu
Xiao-Zhong Zhong
Wang Songtao
Cai-Hong Shen
Qian Wei
Xu Zhenghong
Jin-Song Shi
Source :
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The mud cellar creates a unique microenvironment for the fermentation of strong-flavor baijiu (SFB). Recent research and long-term practice have highlighted the key roles of microbes inhabiting pit mud in the formation of SFB’s characteristic flavor. A positive correlation between the quality of SFB and cellar age was extracted from practice; however, the evolutionary patterns of pit mud microbiome and driving factors remain unclear. Here, based on the variation regularity analysis of microbial community structure and metabolites of samples from cellars of different ages (∼30/100/300 years), we further investigated the effects of lactate and acetate (main microbial metabolites in fermented grains) on modulating the pit mud microbiome. Esters (50.3% to 64.5%) dominated the volatile compounds identified in pit mud, and contents of the four typical acids (lactate, hexanoate, acetate, and butyrate) increased with cellar age. Bacteria (9.5 to 10.4 log10 [lg] copies/g) and archaea (8.3 to 9.1 lg copies/g) mainly constituted pit mud microbiota, respectively dominated by Clostridia (39.7% to 81.2%) and Methanomicrobia (32.8% to 92.9%). An upward trend with cellar age characterized the relative and absolute abundance of the most predominant bacterial and archaeal genera, Caproiciproducens and Methanosarcina. Correlation analysis revealed significantly (P

Details

ISSN :
10985336
Volume :
87
Issue :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Applied and environmental microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....508c82498ab47a509a1d8980793c4a81