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Enzymatic disruption of biofilms during cheese manufacturing: A mini review

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-02-23, 15:00 authored by Murali KumarMurali Kumar, Joseph Tierney, Martin G. Wilkinson
Bacteria are capable of colonizing industrial processing surfaces creating biofilms on them which may adversely affect the quality and safety of products. Traditional cleaning in-place (CIP) treatments using caustic and nitric acid solutions have been known to exhibit variable efficiency in eliminating biofilm bacteria. Here, we introduce enzymes as an alternative to traditional CIP treatments and discuss their mechanism of action against bacterial biofilms in cheese manufacturing. In addition, we discuss research gaps namely thermal stability, substrate specificity and residual activity of enzymes that may play a vital role in the selection of enzymes with optimal effectiveness against multi species biofilms. The outcome of this mini review will aid in the development of a novel and sustainable enzyme-based CIP treatment during cheese manufacturing in the future.

History

Publication

Frontiers in Microbiology;12, article 791061

Publisher

Frontiers Media

Note

peer-reviewed

Other Funding information

Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and the Marine (DAFM), Food Institutional Research Measure (FIRM)

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This Document is Protected by copyright and was first published by Frontiers. All rights reserved. it is reproduced with permission

Language

English

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