L. Thomas, R. Ingram, Shu-yun Yu
Jun 15, 2004
Citations
1
Influential Citations
23
Citations
Journal
International journal of food microbiology
Abstract
Ascopyrone P (APP), a novel antibacterial from fungi, was evaluated as a food preservative. Efficacy was generally assessed by comparing the time taken for test strains to grow to 10(6) CFU/g in food +/- APP. In chilled chicken soup, 2000 mg kg-1 APP prevented Bacillus cereus, Listeria monocytogenes, Pseudomonas fluorescens, Salmonella and Escherichia coli reaching this threshold for >60 days. Good activity was also observed at 500-1000 mg kg-1 but not against L. monocytogenes. No activity was observed against Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Activity was reduced at 20 degrees C, although 2000 mg kg-1 was still effective against B. cereus and P. fluorescens. APP was less effective in chilled cooked meat systems and ineffective in raw meat. In a cooked meat system at 8 degrees C, bacteriostatic effect was generally observed at 2000 mg kg-1 against Salmonella typhimurium, E. coli and P. fluorescens but not against L. monocytogenes or Lactobacillus sake. Activity against Gram-negative enteric bacteria was enhanced by low temperature. In milk, 2000 mg l-1 was effective against P. fluorescens at chilled but not ambient temperature. APP was ineffective against yeasts and the mould Byssochlamys in apple juice. A minimum of 2000 mg kg-1 APP would appear to be necessary for antibacterial efficacy in food, although low-temperature storage may help. Observed variations in sensitivity may be related to APP stability, which decreases >pH 5.5. Toxicology testing is needed before consideration of APP for food use.