INVESTIGADORES
COMBINA Mariana
artículos
Título:
Water activity & temperature effects on growth of Aspergillus niger, A. awamoria & A. carbonarius isolated from different substrates in Argentina
Autor/es:
ASTORECA, ANDREA; MAGNOLI, CARINA; RAMIREZ, MARÍA LAURA; COMBINA, MARIANA; DALCERO, ANA MARÍA
Revista:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF FOOD MICROBIOLOGY
Editorial:
Elsevier
Referencias:
Lugar: Lincoln, EEUU; Año: 2007 vol. 119 p. 314 - 318
ISSN:
0168-1605
Resumen:
The objectives of this study were to determine the effect of water activity,temperature, and their interactions on a) mycelial growth rate and b) the lag phase prior to grow of seven isolates of Aspergillus section Nigri isolated from peanuts, maize kernels, dried grapes and coffee cherries from Argentina. Three Aspergillus niger, three A. awamori and one A. carbonarius isolates examined showed optimum aW level for growth at 0.97 with optimal temperature of 30 °C. for most of the isolates and 25 ºC for only one (A. awamori RCP176). Minimal aW for growth was 0.85 at the highest temperature tested. Overall growth was reduced up to 50% at 0.93 aW. Growth was also to a large extend inhibited at 0.85 aW for most isolates even after 21 days of incubation at temperatures lower than 30 ºC. The analysis of variance of the effect of single (isolate, aW and temperature), two- and three- way interaction showed that all factors alone and all interactions were statistically significant (p<0.001) in relation to growth rates and lag phase for A. niger, for A. awamori and A. carbonarius isolates. These data are relevant since these species are isolated in high frequency on numerous substrates for human and animal consumption in Argentina.Aspergillus section Nigri isolated from peanuts, maize kernels, dried grapes and coffee cherries from Argentina. Three Aspergillus niger, three A. awamori and one A. carbonarius isolates examined showed optimum aW level for growth at 0.97 with optimal temperature of 30 °C. for most of the isolates and 25 ºC for only one (A. awamori RCP176). Minimal aW for growth was 0.85 at the highest temperature tested. Overall growth was reduced up to 50% at 0.93 aW. Growth was also to a large extend inhibited at 0.85 aW for most isolates even after 21 days of incubation at temperatures lower than 30 ºC. The analysis of variance of the effect of single (isolate, aW and temperature), two- and three- way interaction showed that all factors alone and all interactions were statistically significant (p<0.001) in relation to growth rates and lag phase for A. niger, for A. awamori and A. carbonarius isolates. These data are relevant since these species are isolated in high frequency on numerous substrates for human and animal consumption in Argentina.