Abstract

Food microbiome composition impacts food safety and quality. The resident microbiota of many food products is influenced throughout the farm to fork continuum by farming practices, environmental factors, and food manufacturing and processing procedures. Currently, most food microbiology studies rely on culture-dependent methods to identify bacteria. However, advances in high-throughput DNA sequencing technologies have enabled the use of targeted 16S rRNA gene sequencing to profile complex microbial communities including non-culturable members. In this study we used 16S rRNA gene sequencing to assess the microbiome profiles of plant and animal derived foods collected at two points in the manufacturing process; post-harvest/pre-retail (cilantro) and retail (cilantro, masala spice mixes, cucumbers, mung bean sprouts, and smoked salmon). Our findings revealed microbiome profiles, unique to each food, that were influenced by the moisture content (dry spices, fresh produce), packaging methods, such as modified atmospheric packaging (mung bean sprouts and smoked salmon), and manufacturing stage (cilantro prior to retail and at retail). The masala spice mixes and cucumbers were comprised mainly of Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Actinobacteria. Cilantro microbiome profiles consisted mainly of Proteobacteria, followed by Bacteroidetes, and low levels of Firmicutes and Actinobacteria. The two brands of mung bean sprouts and the three smoked salmon samples differed from one another in their microbiome composition, each predominated by either by Firmicutes or Proteobacteria. These data demonstrate diverse and highly variable resident microbial communities across food products, which is informative in the context of food safety, and spoilage where indigenous bacteria could hamper pathogen detection, and limit shelf life.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThis idea, that the food that you consume controls your health, is not novel, and may be attributed to an early monograph on gout by Brillat-Savarin (2010)

  • Since the resident bacteria will resuscitate simultaneously with foodborne pathogens they may compete for nutrients during the non-selective and selective culture enrichment steps and hamper pathogen detection

  • Subsequent to this study we incorporated heterotrophic plate counting into our workflow since it is possible and likely that some of the biomass we observed using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing is from non-viable bacteria

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Summary

Introduction

This idea, that the food that you consume controls your health, is not novel, and may be attributed to an early monograph on gout by Brillat-Savarin (2010). Food Microbiomes (GI) tract (Qin et al, 2010; Human Microbiome Project Consortium, 2012a,b). This paper explores food microbiomes to identify bacteria that are associated with foods and have the potential to colonize our gastrointestinal tract. These resident cohorts of bacteria on our food may be a factor in food safety, affecting our ability to detect and identify pathogens during foodborne outbreaks, and contribute to the general transmission of bacteria between the environment and the human body

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