Microbial community on industrial salty bovine hides: From the slaughterhouse to the salting

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Title: Microbial community on industrial salty bovine hides: From the slaughterhouse to the salting
Authors: Nadal-Molero, Francisco | Campos-Lopez, Alicia | Tur-Moya, Juan | Martín Cuadrado, Ana Belén
Research Group/s: Ecología Microbiana Molecular
Center, Department or Service: Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Fisiología, Genética y Microbiología
Keywords: Red-heat contamination | Purple contamination | Hide salting process | Halophile | Bovine-hide microbial community | Collagen degradation
Issue Date: 18-May-2023
Publisher: Elsevier
Citation: Systematic and Applied Microbiology. 2023, 46(4): 126421. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.syapm.2023.126421
Abstract: The leather-making industry is an age-old industry and desiccation with salt has been one of the most used methodologies for obtaining valuable skins. However, halophiles may proliferate and affect the integrity of the hide-collagen structure, as well as leading to undesirable red colorations or less-frequent purple stains. To understand the basis of these industrial hide contaminations, the microbial community from raw hide samples, salt-cured samples and four different industrial salts, was analyzed by 16S rRNA gene metabarcoding together with standard cultivation methods. Comparison of raw hides and correctly cured hides revealed a core microbiome that was absent from contaminated hides. In addition, archaea were missing from well-cured hides, whereas Psychrobacter and Acinetobacter were highly represented (23% and 17.4%, respectively). In damaged hides, only a few operational taxonomic units (OTUs), from among the hundreds detected, were able to proliferate and, remarkably, a single Halomonas OTU represented 57.66% of the reads. Halobacteria, mainly Halovenus, Halorubrum and Halovivax, increased by up to 36.24-39.5% in the red- and purple-affected hides. The major contaminants were isolated and hide infections, together with collagenase activity, were evaluated. The results showed that hides enriched with the non-pigmented isolate Halomonas utahensis COIN160 damaged the collagen fibers similarly to Halorubrum, and together they were considered to be one of the major causes. Putative degrading inhibitors were also identified from among the Alkalibacillus isolates. It was concluded that hide contaminations were driven by clonal outbreaks of a few specific microbes, which may have been non-pigmented collagen degraders. Acinetobacter and Alkalibacillus, members of the core microbiome of raw and well-cured salted hides, are suggested as hide contaminant inhibitors that need further analysis.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/134499
ISSN: 0723-2020 (Print) | 1618-0984 (Online)
DOI: 10.1016/j.syapm.2023.126421
Language: eng
Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Rights: © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier GmbH. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Peer Review: si
Publisher version: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.syapm.2023.126421
Appears in Collections:INV - EMM - Artículos de Revistas

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