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Next Article 

Appl Environ Microbiol. 1990 October; 56(10): 2951-2956

Influence of water activity and temperature on survival of and colony formation by heat-stressed Chrysosporium farinicola aleuriospores.

L R Beuchat and J I Pitt

Division of Food Processing, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, New South Wales, Australia.

ABSTRACT

The ability of sublethally heat-stressed aleuriospores of Chrysosporium farinicola to form colonies on yeast extract-glucose agar (YGA) supplemented with sufficient glucose, sorbitol, glycerol, and NaCl to achieve reduced water activity (aw) in the range of 0.88 to 0.95 was determined. The effects of the aw of diluent and incubation temperature during recovery and colony formation were also investigated. Aleuriospores harvested from 14-day-old cultures grown at 25 degrees C were less resistant to heat inactivation compared with aleuriospores from 20-day-cultures. Increased populations of heat-stressed aleuriospores were recovered as the aw of YGA was decreased from 0.95 (glucose and glycerol) and 0.94 (sorbitol) to 0.89 and 0.88, respectively. In NaCl-supplemented YGA, populations recovered at an aw of 0.94 were greatly reduced compared with populations detected at an aw of 0.92; no colonies were formed on NaCl-supplemented YGA at an aw of 0.88. Tolerance to aw values above 0.88 to 0.89 as influenced by solute type was in the order of glucose greater than sorbitol greater than glycerol greater than NaCl. Incubation at 20 degrees generally resulted in an increase in recoverable aleuriospores compared with incubation at 25 degrees C or at 30 degrees C for 14 days followed by 20 degrees C for 10 days. The lethal effect of NaCl on heat-stressed aleuriospores was enhanced at 30 degrees C. The retention of viability of aleuriospores held in sucrose-peptone water diluent (aw, 0.936) for 20 min was essentially the same as that observed when aleuriospores were held in peptone water (aw, 0.997).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1990 October; 56(10): 2951-2956







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