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Bacillus cereus in whey process

  • Tuija Pirttijärvi
  • , Leena Ahonen
  • , Liisa Maunuksela
  • , Mirja Sinikka Salkinoja-Salonen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

A cheese dairy and its whey manufacturing line were examined for Bacillus cereus. Colonies typical of B. cereus were 21 detected in 120 (17%) samples out of 720 analysed. Only 3% of the sampled raw milk contained B. cereus ($10 cfu ml ) whereas in evaporated whey concentrate B. cereus was present in 76% of the samples. Nitrate reductase negative and weakly casein hydrolysis isolates were rare in raw milk and the early parts of the process but these defective biotypes became increasingly frequent towards the end of the whey process. The composition of whole cell fatty acids of B. cereus isolates originating from the whey part of the process was different from that of the type strain and of the isolates originating from the raw materials of cheese making. The B. cereus strains in concentrated whey were 100% similar to the type strain in 16S
rDNA sequence (500 bp) although they were not or only poorly recognized as B. cereus by a commercial whole cell fatty acid library. All of B. cereus isolates in raw milk were sensitive to one or more of the B. cereus group phages (n517)
whereas 43% of the isolates from the whey process were sensitive to none. None of the 23 strains originating from the whey processing lines grew at #88C, although strains with minimum growth temperatures of 5.38C and 7.08C were present in the raw materials. Our results indicate that the B. cereus population of the warm (.308C) parts of the cheese dairy process was separate from that of cold (28C to 48C) part of the process. Ó 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
Volume44
Pages (from-to)31-41
Number of pages11
ISSN0168-1605
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1998
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 416 Food Science
  • Bacillus cereus
  • whey
  • dairy
  • cheese making
  • biofilm
  • biofouling

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