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New insights into the thermophilic spore-formers in powdered infant formula: Implications of changes in microbial composition during manufacture

Authors
Cho, Tae JinKim, Hye WonKim, Nam HeePark, Sun MinKwon, Jeong IlKim, Young JunLee, Kwang WonRhee, Min Suk
Issue Date
Oct-2018
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Keywords
Powdered infant formula; Processing line; Spore-forming bacteria; Obligate thermophile; Bacillus cereus
Citation
FOOD CONTROL, v.92, pp.464 - 470
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
FOOD CONTROL
Volume
92
Start Page
464
End Page
470
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/72673
DOI
10.1016/j.foodcont.2018.05.036
ISSN
0956-7135
Abstract
Although spore-formers and thermopiles are regarded as general contaminants of powdered infant formula (PIF), the source of contamination and the effects of the manufacturing processes on microbial composition are still unclear. Here, total count (TC) and spore count (SC) of mesophilic/thermophilic bacteria, coliforms, and major foodborne pathogens (Bacillus cereus, Cronobacter spp., Salmonella spp., Staphylococcus aureus) were analyzed at different points along the processing lines (raw materials, and during mixing, sterilization, condensation, homogenization, drying) at three different manufacturing plants. Raw material was contamination source of mesophiles and thermophiles detected up to 3.1 and 5.3 log CFU/g, respectively. Heat-sterilization was the key process for inactivating mesophiles in raw materials, but was ineffective against thermophiles. This is likely due to the formation of highly-heat-resistant spores (TC and SC were not significantly different). Thermophilic TCs in post-sterilization steps were higher than mesophiles, suggesting the presence of obligate thermophiles undetectable by general bacterial analysis methods. Mesophiles and thermophiles were detected at all stages, from raw materials to the end-product (0.8-1.2 and 2.0-4.4 log CFU/g or mL, respectively). Coliforms (2.5 log CFU/ mL) were detected only after mixing of raw materials, but were eliminated by heat-sterilization. Foodborne pathogens were not detected except for B. cereus. The results of this study present thermophilic spore-former as a major contaminant in the processing lines: 1) highly-heat-resistant spore-forming characteristics allow them to be present in any manufacturing step, 2) thermophilicity highlights the needs on the identification and characterization of isolates available for growth during the processing. Therefore, it is important to predict the impact of bacterial growth in terms of deteriorating product quality or safety, and to develop appropriate countermeasures.
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