RemNote Community
Community

Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Food Microbiology – Study of microorganisms that inhabit, produce, or contaminate foods, covering spoilage organisms, pathogens, fermenters, and probiotics. Metabolic Traits – Aerobic (need O₂), Anaerobic (inhibited by O₂), Facultative anaerobes (grow either way); some generate gas or slime (extracellular polysaccharides). Temperature Groups – Thermophilic > 50 °C, Thermoduric (survive pasteurization), Psychrotrophic < 5 °C. Tolerance Groups – Halotolerant > 10 % NaCl, Aciduric (low pH), Osmophilic (high osmotic pressure). Spore‑Forming & Indicator Bacteria – Spore‑formers cause heat‑resistant contamination; coliforms (e.g., E. coli) signal sanitation quality. Fermentation – Microbial conversion of sugars → acids, alcohols, CO₂ that preserve food and develop flavor. Food Safety Tools – Probiotic bacteriocins (e.g., nisin), bacteriophages, PCR for rapid DNA‑based pathogen detection. --- 📌 Must Remember Thermophilic = growth > 50 °C; Psychrotrophic = growth < 5 °C. Halotolerant = survive >10 % NaCl (e.g., Vibrio). Coliforms are indicators, not necessarily pathogens. Nisin = bacteriocin from Lactococcus lactis used as a food preservative. Bacteriophages kill only bacteria – safe for foods. PCR amplifies a specific DNA fragment → millions of copies → detection of bacteria/viruses (e.g., Salmonella, HIV, anthrax). Spore‑forming bacteria can survive pasteurization; Clostridium and Bacillus are key culprits. --- 🔄 Key Processes Fermentation (Lactic Acid Bacteria) Inoculate food → carbohydrate metabolism → lactic acid → pH ↓ → pathogen inhibition. PCR Detection Sample → DNA extraction → Denaturation (95 °C) → Primer annealing (≈55 °C) → Extension (72 °C, Taq polymerase) → repeat ×30 cycles → gel/e‑probe readout. Bacteriocin Production (Probiotic) Probiotic growth → synthesis of peptide (e.g., nisin) → secretion → binds to target bacterial membrane → pore formation → cell death. Spore Survival Through Pasteurization Heat → vegetative cells killed → dormant spores survive → can germinate later if conditions favorable. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Lactic Acid Bacteria vs. Acid‑Producing Bacteria Lactic: convert sugars → lactic acid (e.g., Lactobacillus). Acid‑producing: oxidize ethanol → acetic acid (e.g., Acetobacter). Aerobic vs. Anaerobic vs. Facultative Aerobic → need O₂. Anaerobic → inhibited by O₂. Facultative → grow with or without O₂. Thermophilic vs. Thermoduric Thermophilic → optimal growth >50 °C. Thermoduric → survive pasteurization but not necessarily grow at high temps. Yeast Fermentation vs. Bacterial Fermentation Yeast (S. cerevisiae) → CO₂ + ethanol → bread, beer, wine. LAB → lactic acid → yogurt, cheese, pickles. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Cooking destroys all toxins.” Heat‑stable microbial toxins (e.g., botulinum toxin) can survive typical cooking temps. “All coliforms are dangerous.” Many are harmless indicators; only certain strains (e.g., pathogenic E. coli O157:H7) cause disease. “Pasteurization kills every bacterium.” Thermoduric, spore‑forming species may survive. “All molds are spoilage organisms.” Some molds are essential for cheese ripening (e.g., Penicillium roqueforti). --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Niche Triangle” – A microbe’s success ≈ Temperature + pH/Salt + Oxygen. Plotting a food’s conditions onto this triangle quickly predicts which groups will dominate. “Spore‑Shield” – Think of spores as “sleeping eggs” that resist heat; if you see a heat‑treated food spoil later, suspect spore‑formers. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Thermoduric bacteria survive pasteurization but may not grow at refrigeration temps. Aciduric bacteria thrive in low‑pH foods (e.g., Lactobacillus in pickles) despite acidic environment. Halotolerant vs. Halophilic – Halotolerant survive >10 % salt; true halophiles need >15 % salt (rare in typical foods). --- 📍 When to Use Which PCR – Choose for rapid, specific detection of known pathogens (e.g., Salmonella) when time is critical. Traditional culture – Use when you need quantitative counts or to isolate unknown organisms. Bacteriocins (nisin) – Add to acidic, high‑protein foods to inhibit Gram‑positive spoilage bacteria. Bacteriophages – Deploy when targeting specific bacterial species without affecting native flora (e.g., Listeria phage spray). --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize Gas‑producing colonies → likely fermentative bacteria (e.g., Clostridium). Slimy colonies → polysaccharide‑producing (slime‑forming) bacteria. Growth at ≤5 °C → psychrotrophic spoilage (e.g., Listeria). Growth after pasteurization → presence of spores or thermoduric strains. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps Confusing “thermophilic” with “thermoduric.” Thermophilic = loves heat; thermoduric = survives heat. Assuming all lactic acid bacteria are harmless. Some can cause spoilage (e.g., off‑flavors in cheese). Choosing PCR for quantification. PCR is qualitative/relative; plate counts give actual CFU numbers. Believing all molds are to be eliminated. Certain molds are deliberately used for cheese ripening; selecting “mold = spoilage” can be wrong. ---
or

Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:

Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or