Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages
Bacteriophages can cause great economic losses due to fermentation failure in dairy plants. Hence, physical and chemical treatments of raw material and/or equipment are mandatory to maintain phage levels as low as possible. Regarding thermal treatments used to kill pathogenic bacteria or achieve lon...
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doaj-7c454320d30d4474a6a788f62f6764a02020-11-24T22:26:36ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2012-01-01210.3389/fmicb.2011.0028216336Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophagesDaniela Marta Guglielmotti0Diego Javier Mercanti1Jorge Alberto Reinheimer2Andrea Del Luján eQuiberoni3Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas - Universidad Nacional del Litoral (CONICET - UNL)Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas - Universidad Nacional del Litoral (CONICET - UNL)Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas - Universidad Nacional del Litoral (CONICET - UNL)Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas - Universidad Nacional del Litoral (CONICET - UNL)Bacteriophages can cause great economic losses due to fermentation failure in dairy plants. Hence, physical and chemical treatments of raw material and/or equipment are mandatory to maintain phage levels as low as possible. Regarding thermal treatments used to kill pathogenic bacteria or achieve longer shelf-life of dairy products, neither low temperature long time (LTLT) nor high temperature short time (HTST) pasteurization were able to inactivate most lactic acid bacteria (LAB) phages. Even though most phages did not survive 90ºC for 2 min, there were some that resisted 90ºC for more than 15 min (conditions suggested by the International Dairy Federation, IDF, for complete phage destruction). Among biocides tested, ethanol showed variable effectiveness in phage inactivation, since only phages infecting dairy cocci and Lactobacillus helveticus were reasonably inactivated by this alcohol, whereas isopropanol was in all cases highly ineffective. In turn, peracetic acid has consistently proved to be very fast and efficient to inactivate dairy phages, whereas efficiency of sodium hypochlorite was variable, even among different phages infecting the same LAB species. Both alkaline chloride foam and ethoxylated nonylphenol with phosphoric acid were remarkably efficient, trait probably related to their highly alkaline or acidic pH values in solution, respectively. Photocatalysis using UV light and TiO2 has been recently reported as a feasible option to industrially inactivate phages infecting diverse LAB species. Processes involving high pressure were barely used for phage inactivation, but until now most studied phages revealed high resistance to these treatments. To conclude, and given the great phage diversity found on dairies, it is always advisable to combine different anti-phage treatments (biocides, heat, high pressure, photocatalysis), rather than using them separately at extreme conditions.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2011.00282/fullhigh pressurebiocidesdairy industryheat treatmentsphage infectionphotocatalysis |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Daniela Marta Guglielmotti Diego Javier Mercanti Jorge Alberto Reinheimer Andrea Del Luján eQuiberoni |
spellingShingle |
Daniela Marta Guglielmotti Diego Javier Mercanti Jorge Alberto Reinheimer Andrea Del Luján eQuiberoni Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages Frontiers in Microbiology high pressure biocides dairy industry heat treatments phage infection photocatalysis |
author_facet |
Daniela Marta Guglielmotti Diego Javier Mercanti Jorge Alberto Reinheimer Andrea Del Luján eQuiberoni |
author_sort |
Daniela Marta Guglielmotti |
title |
Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages |
title_short |
Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages |
title_full |
Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages |
title_fullStr |
Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages |
title_full_unstemmed |
Review: Efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages |
title_sort |
review: efficiency of physical and chemical treatments on the inactivation of dairy bacteriophages |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Microbiology |
issn |
1664-302X |
publishDate |
2012-01-01 |
description |
Bacteriophages can cause great economic losses due to fermentation failure in dairy plants. Hence, physical and chemical treatments of raw material and/or equipment are mandatory to maintain phage levels as low as possible. Regarding thermal treatments used to kill pathogenic bacteria or achieve longer shelf-life of dairy products, neither low temperature long time (LTLT) nor high temperature short time (HTST) pasteurization were able to inactivate most lactic acid bacteria (LAB) phages. Even though most phages did not survive 90ºC for 2 min, there were some that resisted 90ºC for more than 15 min (conditions suggested by the International Dairy Federation, IDF, for complete phage destruction). Among biocides tested, ethanol showed variable effectiveness in phage inactivation, since only phages infecting dairy cocci and Lactobacillus helveticus were reasonably inactivated by this alcohol, whereas isopropanol was in all cases highly ineffective. In turn, peracetic acid has consistently proved to be very fast and efficient to inactivate dairy phages, whereas efficiency of sodium hypochlorite was variable, even among different phages infecting the same LAB species. Both alkaline chloride foam and ethoxylated nonylphenol with phosphoric acid were remarkably efficient, trait probably related to their highly alkaline or acidic pH values in solution, respectively. Photocatalysis using UV light and TiO2 has been recently reported as a feasible option to industrially inactivate phages infecting diverse LAB species. Processes involving high pressure were barely used for phage inactivation, but until now most studied phages revealed high resistance to these treatments. To conclude, and given the great phage diversity found on dairies, it is always advisable to combine different anti-phage treatments (biocides, heat, high pressure, photocatalysis), rather than using them separately at extreme conditions. |
topic |
high pressure biocides dairy industry heat treatments phage infection photocatalysis |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2011.00282/full |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT danielamartaguglielmotti reviewefficiencyofphysicalandchemicaltreatmentsontheinactivationofdairybacteriophages AT diegojaviermercanti reviewefficiencyofphysicalandchemicaltreatmentsontheinactivationofdairybacteriophages AT jorgealbertoreinheimer reviewefficiencyofphysicalandchemicaltreatmentsontheinactivationofdairybacteriophages AT andreadellujanequiberoni reviewefficiencyofphysicalandchemicaltreatmentsontheinactivationofdairybacteriophages |
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