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Review
. 2023 Mar 28;12(7):1430.
doi: 10.3390/foods12071430.

Synergistic Effect of Combination of Various Microbial Hurdles in the Biopreservation of Meat and Meat Products-Systematic Review

Affiliations
Review

Synergistic Effect of Combination of Various Microbial Hurdles in the Biopreservation of Meat and Meat Products-Systematic Review

Marcelina Karbowiak et al. Foods. .

Abstract

The control of spoilage microorganisms and foodborne pathogens in meat and meat products is a challenge for food producers, which potentially can be overcome through the combined use of biopreservatives, in the form of a mix of various microbial hurdles. The objective of this work is to systematically review the available knowledge to reveal whether various microbial hurdles applied in combination can pose an effective decontamination strategy for meat and meat products. PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus were utilized to identify and evaluate studies through February 2023. Search results yielded 45 articles that met the inclusion criteria. The most common meat biopreservatives were combinations of various starter cultures (24 studies), and the use of mixtures of non-starter protective cultures (13 studies). In addition, studies evaluating antimicrobial combinations of bacteriocins with other bacteriocins, BLIS (bacteriocin-like inhibitory substance), non-starter protective cultures, reuterin, and S-layer protein were included in the review (7 studies). In one study, a biopreservative mixture comprised antifungal protein PgAFP and protective cultures. The literature search revealed a positive effect, in most of the included studies, of the combination of various bacterial antimicrobials in inhibiting the growth of pathogenic and spoilage bacteria in meat products. The main advantages of the synergistic effect achieved were: (1) the induction of a stronger antimicrobial effect, (2) the extension of the spectrum of antibacterial action, and (3) the prevention of the regrowth of undesirable microorganisms. Although further research is required in this area, the combination of various microbial hurdles can pose a green and valuable biopreservation approach for maintaining the safety and quality of meat products.

Keywords: bacterial-derived antimicrobials; compounds; decontamination strategies; foodborne pathogens; meat safety; shelf life extension; synergism.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
PRISMA flowchart illustrating the identification of studies for inclusion.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Starter cultures, non-starter protective cultures, or other microbial metabolites can be applied in diverse combinations to meat to gain advantages related mainly to foodborne pathogens and spoilage bacteria inhibition (primary benefit) and lowering the dosage of antimicrobial agents (secondary benefit). Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 27 February 2023).

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