Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation
Proteinase-producing halophilic archaea were isolated from Thai fish sauce collected from industrial fermentation tanks at various periods of fermentation. Five isolates namely, J-1-S4, J-1-S13, J-1-S22, 2 m-40-15-R2, and P-1-S8, were identified as Halobacterium salinarum with slightly different col...
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th-mahidol.830732023-06-18T23:33:32Z Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation Udomsil N. Mahidol University Agricultural and Biological Sciences Proteinase-producing halophilic archaea were isolated from Thai fish sauce collected from industrial fermentation tanks at various periods of fermentation. Five isolates namely, J-1-S4, J-1-S13, J-1-S22, 2 m-40-15-R2, and P-1-S8, were identified as Halobacterium salinarum with slightly different colony and morphological characteristics among isolates. Starters of five isolates were prepared and added to the anchovy mixed with 25% solar salt and fermented for 180 days at 30–35°C. Halophilic bacteria/archaea counts of inoculated samples were decreased and undetected after 120 days of fermentation. At 180 days of fermentation, α-amino group contents of inoculated fish sauce samples (856–1010 mM) and total nitrogen content (2.2%–2.5%) were higher than the control without archaea inoculation (p < 0.05). All samples contained low amounts of biogenic amines, suggesting that all starters were not biogenic amine formers. The major volatile compound found in samples inoculated with H. salinarum P-1-S8 and H. salinarum 2 m-40-15-R2 was 3-methylbutanal, which contributes to the meaty note. Dimethyl disulfide, a compound that contributes to fecal note, was detected in all inoculated samples in a lower amount than in the commercial fish sauce (p < 0.05). Thus, H. salinarum accelerated protein hydrolysis and produced desirable volatile compounds during fish sauce fermentation in a strain-specific manner. 2023-06-18T16:33:32Z 2023-06-18T16:33:32Z 2022-12-01 Article Journal of Food Science Vol.87 No.12 (2022) , 5375-5389 10.1111/1750-3841.16368 17503841 00221147 36374210 2-s2.0-85142190197 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/83073 SCOPUS |
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Agricultural and Biological Sciences Udomsil N. Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
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Proteinase-producing halophilic archaea were isolated from Thai fish sauce collected from industrial fermentation tanks at various periods of fermentation. Five isolates namely, J-1-S4, J-1-S13, J-1-S22, 2 m-40-15-R2, and P-1-S8, were identified as Halobacterium salinarum with slightly different colony and morphological characteristics among isolates. Starters of five isolates were prepared and added to the anchovy mixed with 25% solar salt and fermented for 180 days at 30–35°C. Halophilic bacteria/archaea counts of inoculated samples were decreased and undetected after 120 days of fermentation. At 180 days of fermentation, α-amino group contents of inoculated fish sauce samples (856–1010 mM) and total nitrogen content (2.2%–2.5%) were higher than the control without archaea inoculation (p < 0.05). All samples contained low amounts of biogenic amines, suggesting that all starters were not biogenic amine formers. The major volatile compound found in samples inoculated with H. salinarum P-1-S8 and H. salinarum 2 m-40-15-R2 was 3-methylbutanal, which contributes to the meaty note. Dimethyl disulfide, a compound that contributes to fecal note, was detected in all inoculated samples in a lower amount than in the commercial fish sauce (p < 0.05). Thus, H. salinarum accelerated protein hydrolysis and produced desirable volatile compounds during fish sauce fermentation in a strain-specific manner. |
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title |
Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
title_short |
Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
title_full |
Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
title_fullStr |
Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
title_full_unstemmed |
Extremely halophilic strains of Halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
title_sort |
extremely halophilic strains of halobacterium salinarum as a potential starter culture for fish sauce fermentation |
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2023 |
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https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/83073 |
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1781414796752584704 |