Biodiversity of the Bacterial Flora on the Surface of a Smear Cheese
Open Access
- 1 February 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Applied and Environmental Microbiology
- Vol. 68 (2) , 820-830
- https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.68.2.820-830.2002
Abstract
The bacteria on the surface of a farmhouse smear-ripened cheese at four stages of ripening (4, 16, 23, and 37 days) from inoculated (i.e., deliberately inoculated with Brevibacterium linens BL2) and noninoculated (not deliberately inoculated with B. linens BL2) cheese were investigated. The results show that, contrary to accepted belief, B. linens is not a significant member of the surface flora of smear cheese and no microbial succession of species occurred during the ripening of the cheeses. Of 400 isolates made, 390 were lactate-utilizing coryneforms and 10 were coagulase-negative Staphylococcus spp. A detailed analysis of the coryneforms was undertaken using phenotypic analysis, molecular fingerprinting, chemotaxonomic techniques, and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. DNA banding profiles (ramdom amplified polymorphic DNA [RAPD]-PCR) of all the coryneform isolates showed large numbers of clusters. However, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) of the isolates from the cheeses showed that all isolates within a cluster and in many contiguous clusters were the same. The inoculated and noninoculated cheeses were dominated by single clones of novel species of Corynebacterium casei (50.2% of isolates), Corynebacterium mooreparkense (26% of isolates), and Microbacterium gubbeenense (12.8% of isolates). In addition, five of the isolates from the inoculated cheese were Corynebacterium flavescens . Thirty-seven strains were not identified but many had similar PFGE patterns, indicating that they were the same species. C. mooreparkense and C. casei grew at pH values below 4.9 in the presence of 8% NaCl, while M. gubbeenense did not grow below pH 5.8 in the presence of 5 to 10% NaCl. B. linens BL2 was not recovered from the inoculated cheese because it was inhibited by all the Staphylococcus isolates and many of the coryneforms. It was concluded that within a particular batch of cheese there was significant bacterial diversity in the microflora on the surface.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Microbacterium gubbeenense sp. nov., from the surface of a smear-ripened cheese.International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 2001
- Corynebacterium mooreparkense sp. nov. and Corynebacterium casei sp. nov., isolated from the surface of a smear-ripened cheese.International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 2001
- Analysis of brevibacteria on the surface of Gruyere cheese detected by in situ hybridization and by colony hybridizationLetters in Applied Microbiology, 1999
- Taxonomic Characterization of Coagulase-Negative Staphylococci in Ripening Flora from Traditional French CheesesSystematic and Applied Microbiology, 1997
- Identification of yeasts and coryneform bacteria from the surface microflora of brick cheesesInternational Journal of Food Microbiology, 1997
- Contribution of starter lactococci and non-starter lactobacilli to proteolysis in Cheddar cheese with a controlled microfloraLe Lait, 1997
- The bacterial flora of surface-ripened cheeses with special regard to coryneformsLe Lait, 1995
- Identification of cheese-smear coryneform bacteriaJournal of Dairy Research, 1986
- Growth of Micro-organisms in Gel-stabilized Two-dimensional Diffusion Gradient SystemsMicrobiology, 1984
- Identification Key for Coryneform Bacteria Derived by Numerical Taxonomic StudiesMicrobiology, 1983