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Sugar profile regulates the microbial metabolic diversity in Chinese Baijiu fermentation.

Authors :
Wang, Zheng
Ji, Xueao
Wang, Shilei
Wu, Qun
Xu, Yan
Source :
International Journal of Food Microbiology. Dec2021, Vol. 359, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Cereals are widely used as raw material for food fermentation, and they can provide a variety of sugars in the fermentation via saccharification. However, the effect of sugar profile on microbial metabolism in spontaneous food fermentation is still unclear. Here, this work studied the regulation of sugar profile on the diversity of microbiota and their metabolism in Chinese Baijiu fermentation using sorghum as raw material. Six sugars were detected during Baijiu fermentation with 6 different cultivars of sorghum. The diversity of microbiota (ANOSIM: bacteria: P = 0.001, R = 0.77; fungi: P = 0.009, R = 0.33) and metabolites (ANOSIM: P = 0.001, R = 0.50) had different profiles during Baijiu fermentation. Among these sugars, glucose, fructose, and arabinose were identified as key sugars driving both the microbial and the metabolic diversity during Chinese Baijiu fermentation, and the metabolic diversity was positively correlated with the microbial diversity (P < 0.05). Hence, response surface methodology was used to establish a predictive model for regulating the metabolic diversity with the combination of three key sugars. The metabolic diversity significantly increased to 0.42 with the optimized levels of glucose (31.82 g/L), fructose (4.81 g/L), and arabinose (0.20 g/L), compared with unoptimized low-level average metabolic diversity (0.29). This work would provide a strategy to control microbial metabolism in spontaneous food fermentation, hence to improve the quality of fermented foods. • Sugar profiles were significantly different in 6 cultivars of sorghum. • Glucose, fructose and arabinose were key sugars driving microbial diversity. • Sugar profile regulated metabolic diversity by driving microbial diversity. • Metabolic diversity was significantly related to microbial diversity. • Combination of abundant sugars and trace sugars had higher metabolic diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01681605
Volume :
359
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Food Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153173710
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2021.109426