Abstract

In the present study, we investigated the effect of Pseudomonas spp. growth on the plasmin enzymatic system in casein and whey fractions of fresh milk. Two bacterial strains, Pseudomonas spp. SRM28A and Pseudomonas fluorescens M3/6, were inoculated at a level of ∼103 cfu/ml into fresh milk and incubated at 7°C for 3 d. Bacterial counts were ∼108 cfu/ml by d 3. Samples collected every 24h were treated to separate the casein from the whey fraction. Casein and whey fractions were subjected to electrophoresis to visualize protein breakdown and plasmin activity and to colorimetric assays to quantify plasmin-related activities. With psychrotrophic bacterial growth, plasmin levels in casein fractions decreased significantly and in whey fractions increased then decreased significantly. Fresh milk results were similar for the two strains and were similar to earlier results with reconstituted nonfat dry milk. A transmission electron microscopy study by immunocytochemistry showed the presence of plasmin in casein micelles and its disappearance upon microbial growth in the milk. We hypothesized that extracellular microbial proteases produced by psychrotrophic microorganisms are responsible for this effect. To confirm this, an extracellular bacterial protease was isolated from Pseudomonas fluorescens M3/6 by ammonium sulfate fractionation and ion-exchange chromatography and incubated with fresh milk. Milk samples analyzed during incubation with the protease had significantly increased plasmin and plasminogen activities in the whey fraction within 5h of incubation, while differences in activities in the casein fraction occurred at time 7.5h for plasmin activity and 10h of incubation for plasminogen activity. These quantitative data were supported by plasmin activity as visualized by casein-SDS-PAGE. These results suggest that growth of the Pseudomonas strains in fresh milk, and particularly their production of extracellular proteases, may be a causative factor in the release of plasmin from the casein micelle. Such plasmin release could affect the quality of cheeses and other food products that utilize dairy ingredients.

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