Davide Porcellato , Luiza de Paula Dias Moreira , Fiona Valerie Franklin , Vinicius da Silva Duarte , Jorun Øyaas , Fredrik Svalestad , Siv Skeie
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Using a metaproteomics approach, we showed that the initial milk quality impacts the proteome allocation of starter cultures used in cheese production and can be considered a fundamental source of cheese quality batch-to-batch variation. Raw milk was spiked with a highly proteolytic strain of Pseudomonas trivialis, previously isolated from raw milk, and incubated for 1, 3, and 6 days at refrigerated temperature. After incubation, the milk was heat-treated and then fermented with a mesophilic starter culture commonly used to produce Gouda-type cheeses. The development of metabolites was analyzed and a taxonomical and functional characterization of the starter culture was performed. Milk storage time impacted both the metaproteome of the starter culture, consequently affecting metabolite levels after fermentation and the level of protein expressed by the different taxa; Lactococcus protein was more abundant in samples made from milk stored longer with Pseudomonas while proteins expressed by Leuconostoc spp. decreased in abundance.
期刊介绍:
The International Dairy Journal publishes significant advancements in dairy science and technology in the form of research articles and critical reviews that are of relevance to the broader international dairy community. Within this scope, research on the science and technology of milk and dairy products and the nutritional and health aspects of dairy foods are included; the journal pays particular attention to applied research and its interface with the dairy industry.
The journal''s coverage includes the following, where directly applicable to dairy science and technology:
• Chemistry and physico-chemical properties of milk constituents
• Microbiology, food safety, enzymology, biotechnology
• Processing and engineering
• Emulsion science, food structure, and texture
• Raw material quality and effect on relevant products
• Flavour and off-flavour development
• Technological functionality and applications of dairy ingredients
• Sensory and consumer sciences
• Nutrition and substantiation of human health implications of milk components or dairy products
International Dairy Journal does not publish papers related to milk production, animal health and other aspects of on-farm milk production unless there is a clear relationship to dairy technology, human health or final product quality.