Abstract
The effects of chitosan and alginate coatings of alginate beads with entrapped Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis were studied in batch and continuous fermentations. Chitosan coating reduced the final concentrations of free cells, the initial release of free cells and the rate of lactate production in milk fermented batch-wise to a final pH of 4.7 in five consecutive batch fermentations. An alternative experimental system based on continuous fermentation with controlled pH and a high dilution rate was developed to better study the phenomenon of cell release. To estimate the effects of different bead coatings on cell release, alginate beads were coated with chitosan or alginate, or sequentially with chitosan/alginate or chitosan/alginate/chitosan. Chitosan coating alone seemed to reduce the rate of cell release only in the early stages of the fermentation, while sequential coatings with chitosan and alginate showed significant reduction throughout the whole test period. To examine whether the observed effects of bead coating could be explained only by a decrease in cell activity, the ratios between the rate of cell release and the rate of lactate production were examined during the fermentations for the different beads. This ratio showed qualitatively the same behavior as direct results of volumetric cell release.
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