Title: Introduction to food microbiology
1Introduction to food microbiology
- A brief history
- Topics in food microbiology
- Survey of microbes
2People have practiced food microbiology for
thousands of years
Even if they didnt k know it
3History of food microbiology
- 8-10,000 years ago
- Food preservation
- Ca. 4,000 years ago
- Fermented foods
- 1600s
- Early observations with microscopes
- 1700s
- Spontaneous generation was challenged (in
experiments involving food)
41800s The Golden Age of Microbiology -Cell
theory -Spontaneous generation disproved -Proof
that fermentation is a biological process -Germ
theory of disease -Canning invented -Discovery
of organisms that cause foodborne
illness -Techniques for studying microbes
Kochs postulateshttp//scienceblogs.com/digitalbi
o/wp-content/blogs.dir/460/files/2012/04/i-67928b6
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5Sanitation
- 1849 John Snow cholera spread through water
contaminated with feces - Several waterborne pathogens isolated
More pathogens isolated from food, diseased
animals, feces
6Foodborne pathogens
- Salmonella enteriditis- isolated from meat as
well as person who ate it - Staphylococcus
- Clostridium botulinum
- Isolated in late 19th century
- Kochs postulates in action!
7Techniques in microbiology
- Pure culture technique
- Microscopy
- Staining, esp. Gram stain
- Sterile microbiological media (liquid and solid)
- Aseptic technique
- Methods to control microbial growth
- Biochemical tests to distinguish microbes
- Studying beneficial microbes as well as pathogens
8Molecular genetics and biotechnology
- Rapid identification
- Genetic engineering
- Understanding mechanisms of resistance,
biochemical processes, etc.
9Limitations of microbiological techniques
- Most microbes cannot be grown in the laboratory
- Microbes do not grow in isolation
- Most microbes have not even been discovered!
10Topics in food microbiology
- Fermentation/probiotics
- Fermented foods and important metabolites
- Making fermenting strains more stable
- Resistant to viruses
- Enhance fermentation capacity
- Understanding probiotics and their effect on the
body (the microbiome)
11Food spoilage
- Which microbes, and under what conditions?
- What are the metabolites (products)?
- How do they work in the cold?
- How can they be controlled?
12Foodborne pathogens
- Detection
- Identification
- Control
- How do we monitor and share information?
- Are we making the problem worse?
- Antibiotic resistance
- Are we introducing pathogens through our
processes?
13What kinds of microbes are found in food?
- Bacteria
- Fungi (yeasts and molds)
- Viruses
- Protozoans, algae, helminths to a lesser extent
- (Helminthsworms)
- Protozoans and helminths are considered
accidental
14Classification of organisms
emc.maricopa.edu
Where are viruses and prions?
15Prokaryotes vs eukaryotes
- Smaller cells
- No nucleus or organelles
- Single-celled
- Bacteria and archaea
- Viruses and prions are not cells so are not
considered alive
- Larger cells
- Cells have nucleus and organelles
- Can be single-celled or multicellular
- Plantae, Animalia, Fungi, Protista
16Nomenclature
- Binomial name genus and species
- Ex. Salmonella typhimurium S. typhimurium
- Subspecies
- Lactococcus lactis ssp. lactis, (soft cheese)
- L. lactis ssp. cremoris (hard cheese)
- Serovar, pathovar, biovar
17Yeasts and molds
- Yeasts single-celled eukaryotes
- Molds multicellular structure (filaments,
spores) required for reproductions - Can be used to make foods but also involved in
spoilage
- Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Carbon dioxide and ethanol
18(No Transcript)
19Molds can grow almost anywhere
- Food spoilage
- Toxins
- Allergens
- Food processing
- Different genera grow on different foods
- Rhizopus- fruits, vegetables, bread
- Geotrichum- dairy mold
- Penicillium-spoils almost everything, but also
used to make cheese
20Viruses infect cells
Can cause disease Interfere with food processing
T4-infects E. coli
Hepatitis A- infects humans
21Protozoans, algae, helminths
- Protozoans can cause parasitic disease (Giardia,
Cryptosporidium, Toxoplasma) - Algae- photosynthetic protists
- Contaminants, food products, toxins
- Helminths- parasites
- Roundworms, tapeworms- contaminated food
22Life cycle of a tapeworm (helminth)
humanillnesses.com
23Bacteria (eubacteria)
- We will spend much lecture time, and most lab
time, working with them - Classification is complicated and changing all
the time - Most bacterial species have not been described,
but many have been very well studied
24Major classification criteria
- Gram-positive or Gram-negative
morningsidemicro.wikidot.com
25Morphology
Scienceblogs.com
www.zazzle.com
26Bacterial classification, continued
- Aerobes, anaerobes, fermenters
- Spore formers, non spore formers
- What metabolic products do they produce?
- Acids, alcohols, gases- and which ones?
- What do they use for food?
- Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins
- Under what conditions do they grow?
- Temperature range, pH range, availability of
water - Do they cause disease? What kind?
27What should a food microbiologist know?
- Characteristics of the different types of
microbes - How to identify and enumerate them
- Factors that affect their growth (innate and
introduced) - Fermentation vs spoilage
- How microbes cause disease
- That the field of food microbiology is a work in
progress!