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Bactericidal efficacy difference between air and nitrogen cold atmospheric plasma on Bacillus cereus: Inactivation mechanism of Gram-positive bacteria at the cellular and molecular level

[Display omitted] •Both air and N2 CAP were effective in inactivating B. cereus at 10 min treatment.•Air CAP show a better inactivation efficacy in a shorter time.•The inactivation mechanism of CAP were investigated at cellular and molecular level.•Air CAP is an effective, inexpensive and green tech...

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Published in:Food research international 2023-11, Vol.173, p.113204-113204, Article 113204
Main Authors: Wang, Yuhan, Liu, Yana, Zhao, Yijie, Sun, Yingying, Duan, Miaolin, Wang, Han, Dai, Ruitong, Liu, Yi, Li, Xingmin, Jia, Fei
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Both air and N2 CAP were effective in inactivating B. cereus at 10 min treatment.•Air CAP show a better inactivation efficacy in a shorter time.•The inactivation mechanism of CAP were investigated at cellular and molecular level.•Air CAP is an effective, inexpensive and green technology for B. cereus inactivation. As an emerging food processing technology, cold atmospheric plasma (CAP) has attracted great attention in the field of microbial inactivation. Although CAP has been proven to effectively inactivate a variety of foodborne pathogens, there is less research on the inactivation of Bacillus cereus, and the exact inactivation mechanism is still unclear. Elucidating the inactivation mechanism will help to develop and optimize this sterilization method, with the prospective application in industrialized food production. This study aims to explore the bactericidal efficacy difference between air and nitrogen CAP on B. cereus, a typical Gram-positive bacterium, and reveals the inactivation mechanism of CAP at the cellular and molecular level, by observing the change of the cell membrane, cell morphological damage, intracellular antioxidant enzyme activity and cellular biomacromolecules changes. The results showed that both air CAP and nitrogen CAP could effectively inactivate B. cereus, which was due to the reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) generated by the plasma causing bacterial death. The damage pathways of CAP on Gram-positive bacteria could be explained by disrupting the bacterial cell membrane and cell morphology, disturbing the intracellular redox homeostasis, and destroying biomacromolecules in the cells. The differences in active species generated by the plasma were the main reason for the different bactericidal efficiencies of air CAP and nitrogen CAP, where air CAP producing RONS with stronger oxidative capacity in a shorter time. This study indicates that air CAP is an effective, inexpensive and green technology for B. cereus inactivation, providing a basis for industrial application in food processing.
ISSN:0963-9969
1873-7145
DOI:10.1016/j.foodres.2023.113204