Abstract

Ultrasound, alone or in combination with natural antimicrobials, is a novel food processing technology of interest to replace traditional food decontamination methods, as it is milder than classical sterilisation (heat treatment) and maintains desirable sensory characteristics. However, ultrasound efficacy can be affected by food structure/composition, as well as the order in which combined treatments are applied. More specifically, treatments which target different cell components could result in enhanced inactivation if applied in the appropriate order. The microbial properties i.e. Gram positive/Gram negative can also impact the treatment efficacy.This work presents a systematic study of the combined effect of ultrasound and nisin on the inactivation of the bacteria Listeria innocua (Gram positive) and Escherichia coli (Gram negative), at a range of cavitation conditions (44, 500, 1000 kHz). The order of treatment application was varied, and the impact of system structure was also investigated by varying the concentration of Xanthan gum used to create the food model systems (0 – 0.5% w/v). Microbial inactivation kinetics were monitored, and advanced microscopy and flow cytometry techniques were utilised to quantify the impact of treatment on a cellular level.Ultrasound was shown to be effective against E. coli at 500 kHz only, with L. innocua demonstrating resistance to all frequencies studied. Enhanced inactivation of E. coli was observed for the combination of nisin and ultrasound at 500 kHz, but only when nisin was applied before ultrasound treatment. The system structure negatively impacted the inactivation efficacy. The combined effect of ultrasound and nisin on E. coli was attributed to short-lived destabilisation of the outer membrane as a result of sonication, allowing nisin to penetrate the cytoplasmic membrane and facilitate cell inactivation.

Highlights

  • Ultrasound is currently used in the food industry for a variety of applications, such as emulsification, mixing, homogenising, and enzyme activation [1,2]

  • The effect of Gram-stain on ultrasound efficacy is yet to be fully elucidated, with some studies indicating that Gram positive bacteria (e.g. Listeria) are more resistant to ultrasound than Gram negative bacteria (e.g. E. coli) [12,50,51,52,53], while others identify no difference in efficacy between Gram positive and Gram negative species [8,13,14,54]

  • This study aims to identify the effect of ultrasound at a range of frequencies, alone and in combination with a sublethal concentration of nisin, on Listeria innocua (Gram positive) or Escherichia coli (Gram negative), in systems of varied viscosity

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Summary

Introduction

Ultrasound is currently used in the food industry for a variety of applications, such as emulsification, mixing, homogenising, and enzyme activation [1,2]. These components are already known individually to have a bactericidal effect in systems unrelated to ultrasound [15,16]

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