Genomic analysis of Pediococcus starter cultures used to control Listeria monocytogenes in turkey summer sausage.

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The pulsed-field technique of clamped homogeneous electric field electrophoresis was employed to characterize and size genomic DNA of three pediocin-producing (Ped+) and two non-pediocin-producing (Ped-) strains of Pediococcus acidilactici. Comparison of genomic fingerprints obtained by digestion with the low-frequency-cleavage endonuclease AscI revealed identical restriction profiles for four of the five strains analyzed. Summation of results for 10 individually sized AscI fragments estimated the genome length to be 1,861 kb for the four strains (H, PAC1.0, PO2, and JBL1350) with identical fingerprints. Genomic analysis of the pediocin-sensitive, plasmid-free strain P. acidilactici LB42 with the unique fingerprint revealed nine AscI fragments and a genome length of about 2,133 kb. Ped- (JBL1350) and Ped+ (JBL1095) starter cultures (one each) were used to separately prepare turkey summer sausage coinoculated with a four-strain Listeria monocytogenes mixture (ca. 10(5) CFU/g). The starter cultures produced equivalent amounts of acid during fermentation, but counts of L. monocytogenes were reduced to a greater extent in the presence of the Ped+ starter culture (3.4 log10 unit decrease) than in the presence of the Ped- starter culture (0.9 log10 unit decrease). Although no listeriae were recovered from sausages following the cook/shower, appreciable pediocin activity was recovered from sausages prepared with the Ped+ strain for at least 60 days during storage at 4 degrees C. The results of this study revealed genomic similarities among pediococcal starter cultures and established that pediocins produced during fermentation provide an additional measure of safety against listerial proliferation in turkey summer sausage.

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