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Food Res Int


Title:Tailor-made microbial consortium for Kombucha fermentation: Microbiota-induced biochemical changes and biofilm formation
Author(s):Savary O; Mounier J; Thierry A; Poirier E; Jourdren J; Maillard MB; Penland M; Decamps C; Coton E; Coton M;
Address:"Univ Brest, Laboratoire Universitaire de Biodiversite et Ecologie Microbienne, F-29280 Plouzane, France. INRAE, Institut Agro, STLO, F-3500 Rennes, France. Univ Brest, Laboratoire Universitaire de Biodiversite et Ecologie Microbienne, F-29280 Plouzane, France; Biogroupe, 11 rue Robert Surcouf, 22430 Erquy, France. Biogroupe, 11 rue Robert Surcouf, 22430 Erquy, France. Univ Brest, Laboratoire Universitaire de Biodiversite et Ecologie Microbienne, F-29280 Plouzane, France. Electronic address: monika.coton@univ-brest.fr"
Journal Title:Food Res Int
Year:2021
Volume:20210618
Issue:
Page Number:110549 -
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2021.110549
ISSN/ISBN:1873-7145 (Electronic) 0963-9969 (Linking)
Abstract:"Kombucha is a very distinct naturally fermented sweetened tea that has been produced for thousands of years. Fermentation relies on metabolic activities of the complex autochthonous symbiotic microbiota embedded in a floating biofilm and used as a backslop for successive fermentations. Here, we designed a tailor-made microbial consortium representative of the core Kombucha microbiota to drive this fermentation. Microbial (counts, metagenetics), physico-chemical (pH, density) and biochemical (organic acids, volatile compounds) parameters were monitored as well as biofilm formation by confocal laser scanning microscopy and scanning electron microscopy. While nine species were co-inoculated, four (Dekkera bruxellensis, Hanseniaspora uvarum, Acetobacter okinawensis and Liquorilactobacillus nagelii) largely dominated. Microbial activities led to acetic, lactic, succinic and oxalic acids being produced right from the start of fermentation while gluconic and glucuronic acids progressively increased. A distinct shift in volatile profile was also observed with mainly aldehydes identified early on, then high abundances of fatty acids, ketones and esters at the end. Correlation analyses, combining metabolomic and microbial data also showed a shift in species abundances during fermentation. We also determined distinct bacteria-yeast co-occurence patterns in biofilms by microscopy. Our study provides clear evidence that a tailor-made consortium can be successfully used to drive Kombucha fermentations"
Keywords:Acetobacter Biofilms Brettanomyces Fermentation Hanseniaspora *Microbial Consortia *Microbiota Biochemical changes Biofilm Confocal microscopy Fermentation dynamics Kombucha Metagenetics Sem;
Notes:"MedlineSavary, Oceane Mounier, Jerome Thierry, Anne Poirier, Elisabeth Jourdren, Julie Maillard, Marie-Bernadette Penland, Marine Decamps, Christophe Coton, Emmanuel Coton, Monika eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Canada 2021/08/18 Food Res Int. 2021 Sep; 147:110549. doi: 10.1016/j.foodres.2021.110549. Epub 2021 Jun 18"

 
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