Abstract

Acetic acid bacteria are involved in many food and beverage fermentation processes. They play an important role in cocoa bean fermentation through their acetic acid production. They initiate the development of some of the flavor precursors that are necessary for the organoleptic quality of cocoa, and for the beans’ color. The development of starter cultures with local strains would enable the preservation of the microbial biodiversity of each country in cocoa-producing areas, and would also control the fermentation. This approach could avoid the standardization of cocoa bean fermentation in the producing countries. One hundred and thirty acetic acid bacteria were isolated from three different cocoa-producing countries, and were identified based on their 16S rRNA gene sequence. The predominate strains were grown in a cocoa pulp simulation medium (CPSM-AAB) in order to compare their physiological traits regarding their specific growth rate, ethanol and lactic acid consumption, acetic acid production, and relative preferences of carbon sources. Finally, the intraspecific diversity of the strains was then assessed through the analysis of their genomic polymorphism by (GTG)5-PCR fingerprinting. Our results showed that Acetobacter pasteurianus was the most recovered species in all of the origins, with 86 isolates out of 130 cultures. A great similarity was observed between the strains according to their physiological characterization and genomic polymorphisms. However, the multi-parametric clustering results in the different groups highlighted some differences in their basic metabolism, such as their efficiency in converting carbon substrates to acetate, and their relative affinity to lactic acid and ethanol. The A. pasteurianus strains showed different behaviors regarding their ability to oxidize ethanol and lactic acid into acetic acid, and in their relative preference for each substrate. The impact of these behaviors on the cocoa quality should be investigated, and should be considered as a criterion for the selection of acetic acid bacteria starters.

Highlights

  • All of the strains were identified as acetic acid bacteria by 16S rRNA gene sequencing with a percentage of identity higher than 98%

  • The intraspecific analysis of strains isolated in three different countries around the world have been studied according to their genomic polymorphism, and their consumption and production of the main metabolites under cocoa-like conditions

  • Genomic polymorphism was not correlated with the analysis of metabolic polymorphism, revealing that (GTG)5 -rep-PCR might not be sufficient for the differentiation of strains’ metabolic features

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Summary

Introduction

Cocoa beans are collected from the fruits, called ‘pods’, of the cocoa tree Theobroma cacao L., which are transformed by a succession of post-harvest treatments, e.g., opening, fermentation, and drying [1]. Cocoa is produced in 50 tropical countries in a well-defined area called the ‘cocoa belt’. The main producing countries are Ivory Coast, Ghana, Nigeria, and Cameroon in Africa; Inperformedsia and Malaysia in Asia; and Brazil, Ecuador, Mexico, and Peru in Latin America [2]. The traditional fermentation of cocoa allows the development 4.0/).

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