This work aims at studying the efficacy of low doses of gaseous ozone in postharvest control of the table grape sour rot, a disease generally attributed to a consortium of non-Saccharomyces yeasts (NSY) and acetic acid bacteria (MB). Sour rot incidence of wounded berries, inoculated with 8 NSYstrains, or 7 AAB, or 56 yeast-bacterium associations, was monitored at 25 degrees C up to six days. Sour rot incidence in wounded berries inoculated with yeast-bacterium associations resulted higher than in berries inoculated with one single NSY or AAB strain. Among all NSY-AAB associations, the yeast-bacterium association composed of Candida zemplinina CBS 9494 (Cz) and Acetobacter syzygii LMG 21419 (As) showed the highest prevalence of sour rot; thus, after preliminary in vitro assays, this simplified As-Cz microbial consortium was inoculated in wounded berries that were stored at 4 degrees C for ten days under ozone (2.14 mg m(-3)) or in air. At the end of cold storage, no berries showed sour-rot symptoms although ozonation mainly affected As viable cell count. After additional 12 days at 25 degrees C, the sour rot index of inoculated As-Cz berries previously cold-stored under ozone or in air accounted for 22.6 +/- 3.7% and 66.7 +/- 4.5%, respectively. Molecular analyses of dominant AAB and NSY populations of both sound and rotten berries during post refrigeration period revealed the appearance of new strains mainly belonging to Gluconobacter albidus and Hanseniaspora uvarum species, respectively. Cold ozonation resulted an effective approach to extend the shelf-life of table grapes also after cold storage. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Efficacy of gaseous ozone to counteract postharvest table grape sour rot

Pinto Loris;Caputo Leonardo;Quintieri Laura;de Candia Silvia;Baruzzi Federico
2017

Abstract

This work aims at studying the efficacy of low doses of gaseous ozone in postharvest control of the table grape sour rot, a disease generally attributed to a consortium of non-Saccharomyces yeasts (NSY) and acetic acid bacteria (MB). Sour rot incidence of wounded berries, inoculated with 8 NSYstrains, or 7 AAB, or 56 yeast-bacterium associations, was monitored at 25 degrees C up to six days. Sour rot incidence in wounded berries inoculated with yeast-bacterium associations resulted higher than in berries inoculated with one single NSY or AAB strain. Among all NSY-AAB associations, the yeast-bacterium association composed of Candida zemplinina CBS 9494 (Cz) and Acetobacter syzygii LMG 21419 (As) showed the highest prevalence of sour rot; thus, after preliminary in vitro assays, this simplified As-Cz microbial consortium was inoculated in wounded berries that were stored at 4 degrees C for ten days under ozone (2.14 mg m(-3)) or in air. At the end of cold storage, no berries showed sour-rot symptoms although ozonation mainly affected As viable cell count. After additional 12 days at 25 degrees C, the sour rot index of inoculated As-Cz berries previously cold-stored under ozone or in air accounted for 22.6 +/- 3.7% and 66.7 +/- 4.5%, respectively. Molecular analyses of dominant AAB and NSY populations of both sound and rotten berries during post refrigeration period revealed the appearance of new strains mainly belonging to Gluconobacter albidus and Hanseniaspora uvarum species, respectively. Cold ozonation resulted an effective approach to extend the shelf-life of table grapes also after cold storage. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
2017
Istituto di Scienze delle Produzioni Alimentari - ISPA
Grape decay
Microbial control
Shelf-life
Ethanol
Acetic acid
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/337669
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