4.6 Article

The Microbial Quality of Commercial Chopped Romaine Lettuce Before and After the Use By Date

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.850720

Keywords

Romaine lettuce; Use By date; microbial food quality; plate counting; 16S rRNA gene sequencing; bacterial communities

Categories

Funding

  1. Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station
  2. USDA HATCH Multistate Research Project [S1077]
  3. University of California, Davis

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This study evaluated the microbial quality of commercial chopped Romaine lettuce before and shortly after the Use By dates. The results showed no significant difference in the microbial quality between the two time points.
In the United States, due to the limited information about the microbial quality and safety of fresh produce after the labeled open dates, unnecessary discarding of fresh produce in good conditions and food loss have been caused. The aim of this study was to address this knowledge gap and evaluate the microbial quality of commercial chopped Romaine lettuce (RL) on the Use By dates (UBD) and 5 days after the Use By dates (UBD5). The microbial quality was evaluated using culture-dependent and culture-independent methods. Three brands of RL samples, from early and late harvest seasons, were purchased from local grocery stores and stored at 4 degrees C until 5 days after their UBD. On the UBD and UBD5, bagged lettuce was opened, homogenized, diluted, and plated onto plate count agar and anaerobic agar to obtain total aerobic plate counts (APC) and total anaerobic plate counts (AnPC). For the culture-independent method, DNA was extracted from each sample homogenate and used for 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The culture-dependent results showed that there was no significant change in APC or AnPC between UBD and UBD5 samples. The APC and AnPC ranged from 5.71 +/- 0.74 to 7.89 +/- 0.10 Log CFU/g and 1.75 +/- 0.08 to 7.32 +/- 0.61 Log CFU/g, respectively. No significant difference in alpha diversity, based on observed features and Shannon index values, was detected between UBD and UBD5 samples using 16S rRNA sequencing. Similarly, no difference was observed in beta diversity based on the Jaccard distance matrixes and the weighted Unifrac distance matrixes. Taxonomic analysis revealed 128 genera in all RL samples. The top five genera were Pseudomonas (with relative abundance ranging from 16.47 to 92.72%), Serratia (0-52.35%), Weissella (0-42.42%), Pantoea (0.17-21.33%), and Lactococcus (0-24.30%). The differential abundance analysis based on the ANCOM test showed that no bacteria were detected to have significantly differential abundance in RL between UBD and UBD5. In summary, both the culture-dependent and culture-independent results showed that there was no significant difference in the microbial quality of RL before and shortly after the UBD.

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