4.7 Article

Metabolic Features of Ganjang (a Korean Traditional Soy Sauce) Fermentation Revealed by Genome-Centered Metatranscriptomics

Journal

MSYSTEMS
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mSystems.00441-21

Keywords

metagenome; fermentation; ganjang; genome centered; metabolic pathway; metatranscriptome; soy sauce

Categories

Funding

  1. Uniports National Research Foundation [2017M3C1B5019250, 2018R1A5A1025077]
  2. Ministry of Science and ICT, Republic of Korea
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea [4199990314086] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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The study investigated the fermentation process of ganjang, a traditional Korean soy sauce, revealing that indigenous enzymes in meju bricks degrade polymeric compounds and significantly impact microbial metabolism. The metabolic features of ganjang fermentation were analyzed through metagenome binning, metatranscriptome sequencing, and metabolic pathway reconstruction, indicating the importance of Tetragenococcus and aerobic bacteria in the fermentation process. Yeasts such as Debaryomyces and Wickerhamomyces were also found to play a role in producing biogenic amines and flavors.
The taste and quality of soy sauce, a fermented liquid condiment popular worldwide, is greatly influenced by microbial metabolism during fermentation. To investigate the fermentative features of ganjang (a Korean traditional soy sauce), ganjang batches using meju (fermented soybean) bricks and solar salts were prepared, and organic compounds, microbial communities, metagenomes, and metatranscriptomes of ganjang were quantitively analyzed during fermentation. Polymeric compound analysis in the ganjang treated with/without microbial inhibitors revealed that indigenous enzymes of meju bricks might be primarily responsible for degrading polymeric compounds. Through metagenome binning and microbe sequencing, 17 high-quality genome sequences representing all major ganjang microbiota were obtained, and their transcriptional expressions were quantitatively analyzed by mapping meta-transcriptome reads normalized by spike-in RNA sequencing to the 17 genomes, which revealed that microbial metabolism might primarily occur while meju bricks are in the ganjang solution and decrease significantly after the removal of meju bricks. Metabolic pathways for carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids of the major ganjang microbiota were reconstructed, and their metabolic genes were transcriptionally analyzed, revealing that facultative lactic acid fermentation by Tetragenococcus was the major fermentation process active in the ganjang fermentation and that aerobic respiration by facultatively aerobic bacteria such as Chromohalobacter, Halomonas, and Marinobacter was also an important metabolic process during fermentation. Although the abundances of Fungi and the corresponding transcriptional expression levels were generally much lower than those of Bacteria, our analysis suggests that yeasts such as Debaryomyces and Wickerhamomyces might be in large part responsible for producing biogenic amines and flavors. IMPORTANCE The taste and quality of soy sauce, a popular fermented liquid condiment worldwide, is greatly influenced by microbial metabolism during fermentation. Spontaneous fermentation of ganjang (a Korean traditional soy sauce) in a nonsterile environment leads to the growth of diverse bacteria and fungi during fermentation, making it difficult to understand the mechanism of ganjang fermentation. Genome-centered metatranscriptomic analysis, combined with organic compound analysis, quantitative metagenome and metatranscriptome analyses, and metabolic pathway reconstruction and expressional analysis of the major ganjang microbiota during fer-mentation, would provide comprehensive insights into the metabolic features of ganjang fermentation.

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