Abstract
Douchi is a type of Chinese traditional fermented food that is an important source of protein and is used in flavouring ingredients. The end product is affected by the microbial community present during fermentation, but exactly how microbes influence the fermentation process remains poorly understood. We used an Illumina MiSeq approach to investigate bacterial and fungal community diversity during both douchi-koji making and fermentation. A total of 181,443 high quality bacterial 16S rRNA sequences and 221,059 high quality fungal internal transcribed spacer reads were used for taxonomic classification, revealing eight bacterial and three fungal phyla. Firmicutes, Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were the dominant bacterial phyla, while Ascomycota and Zygomycota were the dominant fungal phyla. At the genus level, Staphylococcus and Weissella were the dominant bacteria, while Aspergillus and Lichtheimia were the dominant fungi. Principal coordinate analysis showed structural separation between the composition of bacteria in koji making and fermentation. However, multivariate analysis of variance based on unweighted UniFrac distances did identify distinct differences (p <0.05), and redundancy analysis identified two key genera that are largely responsible for the differences in bacterial composition between the two steps. Staphylococcus was enriched in koji making, while Corynebacterium was enriched in fermentation. This is the first investigation to integrate douchi fermentation and koji making and fermentation processes through this technological approach. The results provide insight into the microbiome of the douchi fermentation process, and reveal a structural separation that may be stratified by the environment during the production of this traditional fermented food.
Highlights
Douchi is a fermented food that is important for flavouring food and that has been produced in China and several other countries for thousands of years [1]
A total of 221,059 high quality ITS tags were obtained from koji making and fermentation across the entire douchi fermentation process
Staphylococcus might play an important role in koji making, consistent with previous studies that revealed a role for Staphylococcus gallinarum in antibiotic activity and proteolytic capacity in the douchi fermentation process [42,43,44], possibly by providing a variety of amino acids or peptides for other genera to use during fermentation
Summary
Douchi is a fermented food that is important for flavouring food and that has been produced in China and several other countries for thousands of years [1]. Black beans used as the raw material are screened, steamed at 115 ̊C for 30 min to soften, cooled, and treated with the ‘house flora’ that initiates koji making. During the koji making stage, Aspergillus oryzaethe is traditionally used for inoculation, while other microorganisms such as Bacillus spp. are used to produce proteases for the degradation of peptides in the subsequent fermentation stage. Illumina MiSeq has been used to investigate many microbial ecosystems, including milk [17,18], landfill leachate treatment [19], Italian salami [20], gut [21], and cheese [22,23,24] Such highthroughput sequencing approaches can provide a more comprehensive insight into microbial community diversity without the bias associated with some of the other techniques [25]. The results should enhance our understanding of the microbiome in this traditional fermented food
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