Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2450327 Meat Science 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The ecology of fermented sausages is complex and includes different species and strains of bacteria, yeasts and molds. The developments in the field of molecular biology, allowed for new methods to become available, which could be applied to better understand dynamics and diversity of the microorganisms involved in the production of sausages. Methods, such as denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE), employed as a culture-independent approach, allow to define the microbial dynamics during the fermentation and ripening. Such approach has highlighted that two main species of lactic acid bacteria, namely Lactobacillus sakei and Lb. curvatus, are involved in the transformation process and that they are accompanied by Staphylococcus xylosus, as representative of the coagulase-negative cocci. These findings were repeatedly confirmed in different regions of the world, mainly in the Mediterranean countries where dry fermented sausages have a long tradition and history. The application of molecular methods for the identification and characterization of isolated strains from fermentations highlighted a high degree of diversity within the species mentioned above, underlining the need to better follow strain dynamics during the transformation process. While there is an important number of papers dealing with bacterial ecology by using molecular methods, studies on mycobiota of fermented sausages are just a few. This review reports on how the application of molecular methods made possible a better comprehension of the sausage fermentations, opening up new fields of research that in the near future will allow to unravel the connection between sensory properties and co-presence of multiple strains of the same species.

► Molecular methods allow for a better comprehension of sausage fermentation. ► Culture-independent methods are able to avoid biases related to cultivation. ► DGGE is a method often used to study the ecology of fermented sausages. ► Lb. sakei and Lb. curvatus dominate in several types of Mediterranean sausages. ► Molecular characterization indicates if inoculated strains take over the fermentation. ► RAPD and Rep-PCR underlined high biodiversity in naturally fermented sausages.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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