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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 1998, p. 4842-4845, Vol. 64, No. 12
Departments of Food Microbiology and
Toxicology1 and
Food
Science,3 University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Madison, Wisconsin 53706, and
Department of Genetics,
University of Groningen, Groningen, The
Netherlands2
Received 12 May 1998/Accepted 3 September 1998
Cheddar cheese was prepared with Lactococcus lactis
subsp. lactis MM217, a starter culture which contains
pMC117 coding for pediocin PA-1. About 75 liters of pasteurized milk
(containing ca. 3.6% fat) was inoculated with strain MM217 (ca.
106 CFU per ml) and a mixture of three Listeria
monocytogenes strains (ca. 103 CFU per ml). The
viability of the pathogen and the activity of pediocin in the cheese
were monitored at appropriate intervals throughout
the manufacturing process and during ripening at 8°C for 6 months. In
control cheese made with the isogenic, non-pediocin-producing starter
culture L. lactis subsp. lactis MM210, the
counts of the pathogen increased to about 107 CFU per g
after 2 weeks of ripening and then gradually decreased to about
103 CFU per g after 6 months. In the experimental cheese
made with strain MM217, the counts of L. monocytogenes decreased to 102 CFU per g
within 1 week of ripening and then decreased to about 10 CFU per g
within 3 months. The average titer of pediocin in the experimental
cheese decreased from approximately 64,000 arbitrary units
(AU) per g after 1 day to 2,000 AU per g after 6 months. No pediocin
activity (<200 AU per g) was detected in the control cheese. Also, the
presence of pMC117 in strain MM217 did not alter the cheese-making
quality of the starter culture, as the rates of acid production, the pH
values, and the levels of moisture, NaCl, and fat of the control cheese
and the experimental cheese were similar. Our data revealed that
pediocin-producing starter cultures have significant potential for
protecting natural cheese against L. monocytogenes.
0099-2240/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Use of a Genetically Enhanced, Pediocin-Producing Starter
Culture, Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis MM217,
To Control Listeria monocytogenes in Cheddar
Cheese

*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Food Research
Institute, 1925 Willow Drive, Madison, WI 53706. Phone: (608) 263-7280. Fax: (608) 263-1114. E-mail: jbluchan{at}facstaff.wisc.edu.
Present address: Quest International BioProducts, Rochester, MN 55901.
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