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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, September 1998, p. 3320-3326, Vol. 64, No. 9
Western Dairy Center, Department of Nutrition
and Food Sciences, Utah State University, Logan, Utah 84322-8700
Received 31 October 1997/Accepted 19 June 1998
Methanethiol has been strongly associated with desirable Cheddar
cheese flavor and can be formed from the degradation of methionine (Met) via a number of microbial enzymes. Methionine
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Conversion of Methionine to Thiols by
Lactococci, Lactobacilli, and Brevibacteria
-lyase is thought to play a major role in the catabolism of Met and generation of
methanethiol in several species of bacteria. Other enzymes that have
been reported to be capable of producing methanethiol from Met in
lactic acid bacteria include cystathionine
-lyase and cystathionine
-lyase. The objective of this study was to determine the production,
stability, and activities of the enzymes involved in methanethiol
generation in bacteria associated with cheese making. Lactococci and
lactobacilli were observed to contain high levels of enzymes that acted
primarily on cystathionine. Enzyme activity was dependent on the
concentration of sulfur amino acids in the growth medium. Met
aminotransferase activity was detected in all of the lactic acid
bacteria tested and
-ketoglutarate was used as the amino group
acceptor. In Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris
S2, Met aminotransferase was repressed with increasing concentrations
of Met in the growth medium. While no Met aminotransferase activity was
detected in Brevibacterium linens BL2, it possessed high
levels of L-methionine
-lyase that was induced by
addition of Met to the growth medium. Met demethiolation activity at pH 5.2 with 4% NaCl was not detected in cell extracts but was
detected in whole cells. These data suggest that Met degradation
in Cheddar cheese will depend on the organism used
in production, the amount of enzyme released during aging, and the
amount of Met in the matrix.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Western Dairy
Center, Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Utah State
University, Logan, UT 84322-8700. Phone: (435) 797-3356. Fax: (435)
797-0103. E-mail: Milkbugs{at}cc.usu.edu.
Approved by the director as contribution 6067 of the Utah
Agricultural Experiment Station.
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