Microbial spoilage of raw meat causes huge economic losses every year. An understanding of the microbial ecology associated with the spoilage and its dynamics during the refrigerated storage of meat can help in preventing and delaying the spoilage-related activities. The raw meat microbiota is usually complex, but only a few members will develop during storage and cause spoilage upon the pressure from several external factors, such as temperature and oxygen availability. We characterized the metagenome of beef packed aerobically or under vacuum during refrigerated storage to explore how different packaging conditions may influence the microbial composition and potential spoilage-associated activities. Different population dynamics and spoilage-associated genomic repertoires occurred in beef stored aerobically or in vacuum packaging. Moreover, the pangenomes of Pseudomonas fragi strains were extracted from metagenomes. We demonstrated the presence of specific, storage-driven strain-level profiles of Pseudomonas fragi, characterized by different gene repertoires and thus potentially able to act differently during meat spoilage. The results provide new knowledge on strain-level microbial ecology associated with meat spoilage and may be of value for future strategies of spoilage prevention and food waste reduction.
CITATION STYLE
De Filippis, F., Storia, A. L., Villani, F., & Ercolini, D. (2019). Strain-Level Diversity Analysis of Pseudomonas fragi after in Situ Pangenome Reconstruction Shows Distinctive Spoilage Associated Metabolic Traits Clearly Selected by different Storage Conditions. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 85(1). https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.02212-18
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