Colony formation by sublethally heat-injured Zygosaccharomyces rouxii as affected by solutes in the recovery medium and procedure for sterilizing medium
1990
Golden, D.A. | Beuchat, L.R.
Recovery and colony formation by healthy and sublethally heat-injured cells of Zygosaccharomyces rouxii as influenced by the procedure for sterilizing recovery media (YM agar [YMA], wort agar, cornmeal agar, and oatmeal agar) were investigated. Media were supplemented with various concentrations of glucose, sucrose, glycerol, or sorbitol and sterilized by autoclaving (110 degrees C, 15 min) and by repeated treatment with steam (100 degrees C). An increase in sensitivity was observed when heat-injured cells were plated on glucose-supplemented YMA at an aw of 0.880 compared with aws of 0.933 and 0.998. Colonies which developed from unheated and heated cells on YMA at aws of 0.998 and 0.933 generally exceeded 0.5 mm in diameter within 3.5 to 4 days of incubation at 25 degrees C, whereas colonies formed on YMA at an aw of 0.880 typically did not exceed 0.5 mm in diameter until after 5.5 to 6.5 days of incubation. The number of colonies exceeding 0.5 mm in diameter which were formed by heat-injured cells on YMA at an aw of 0.880 was 2 to 3 logs less than the total number of colonies detected, i.e., on YMA at an aw of 0.933 and using no limits of exclusion based on colony diameter. A substantial portion of cells which survived heat treatment were sublethally injured as evidenced by increased sensitivity to a suboptimum aw (0.880). In no instance was recovery of Z. rouxii significantly affected by medium sterilization procedure when glucose or sorbitol was used as the aw-suppressing solute. In 7 of 80 pair comparisons (autoclaving versus steaming), significant differences were detected in populations recovered on media supplemented with sucrose and glycerol. In six of these seven pairs, significantly higher populations were detected on steamed versus autoclaved media. Significant differences in recovery of unheated cells were due to solute type in 16 of 80 comparisons; for heated cells, significant differences were noted for 34 comparisons. When differences did occur, the enhanced effect of solute on recovery of unheated and heated cells was typically in the order of glucose greater than or equal to sucrose greater than or equal to glycerol greater than or equal to sorbitol and glucose greater than or equal to glycerol greater than or equal to sucrose greater than or equal to sorbitol.
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