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MILK FERMENTERS
©David B. Fankhauser, Ph.D.,
Professor of Biology and Chemistry
University of Cincinnati Clermont College,
Batavia OH 45103
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Gram stain of yogurt, 1000x
with Lactobacillus acidiphilus
and
Steptococcus thermophilus
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This page has been
accessed
times since 11 September 2004.
9 July 1995, rvsd 28 June '96, 7 July '97, 23
Feb. '99,
18 Apr 99, 12 July 00
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Gram stain of yogurt, 1000x
with Lactobacillus acidiphilus
and
Steptococcus thermophilus
|
Milk is extremely perishable and many means have been developed to
preserve
it. The earliest one which has been used for many thousands of years is
fermentation. Milk can be fermented by inoculating fresh milk with the
appropriate bacteria and keeping it at a temperature which favors
bacterial
growth. As the bacteria grow, they convert milk sugar (lactose)
to lactic acid. You can detect its presence by the tart or sour
taste (sour
is how we taste acid). The lowered pH caused by lactic acid
preserves the milk by preventing the growth of putrefactive and/or
pathogenic bacteria
which do not grow well in acid conditions.
Fermentation is a means by which cells growing anaerobically
can still generate a little ATP. Fermentation is defined
biochemically as the catabolism of glucose
(or other sugars) in which the terminal hydrogen acceptor is an organic
molecule (carbon containing). During the breakdown of
sugar,
known as glycolysis,
excess
hydrogen atoms are generated and must be deposited somewhere. In
lactic acid bacteria, they "dump"
excess hydrogens on to pyruvic
acid, the end product of glycolysis. This turns pyruvic acid
into lactic
acid. Our muscles do the same thing, which causes the sting
in
over
exercised muscles. In all fermentation, NADH gives up its
hydrogen to produce NAD, which is required for further
glycolysis. Yeast too performs
fermentation, but with different terminal hydrogen acceptors (acetaldehyde)
and
products (CO2
and
ethanol).
You
will note that alcoholic fermentation is also an anaerobic process.
Since
the terminal hydrogen acceptor in each of these microbiological
processes
is an organic molecule, they are, by definition, fermentation.
In contrast, respiration uses an inorganic terminal
hydrogen
acceptor (such as oxygen). If oxygen is the acceptor, then water is
produced.
Casein, the predominant protein in milk, is soluble at a neutral pH,
but insoluble in acid. Thus when milk sours, casein precipitates
which thickens the product. Numerous strains of bacteria are
capable
of converting lactose to lactic acid. We will look at several
fermented
milk products to study their morphology and staining characteristics.
- Make a thin smear of each milk product well spaced on
the
same slide,
labeling with a wax pencil Y, B and S. (see protocol Smear and
Staining
of Bacterial Specimens)
- Stain them according to the procedure for the Gram stain
(see related
protocol Gram Stain Protocol), or any simple stain such as
methylene
blue, should you only be interested in seeing bacterial morphology.
- View the stained smear at 400x to determine the
characteristic features,
select a field which is well spread and typically stained. Then switch
to 1000x with oil. (The oil immersion lens is challenging to
novices.
Do not use this lens unless you have been instsructed in its use.)
- Illustrate typical fields for each milk product showing
all
observed
morphologies of bacteria. Label the morphologies and their probable
identities according to the following type of bacteria expected in
these fermented milk products:
YOGURT: Yogurt is produced by a mixed culture of two types of
bacteria.
Imbedded in particles of the protein casein, you will see chains of
cocci
or diplococci (Streptococcus thermophilus) and big rod-shaped
bacilli
(either Lactobacillus acidophilus or L. bulgaricus).
If
you do a Gram stain, the bacteria will be Gram positive (purple) and
the protein will be pink. The illustrations at the top of the
page
are micrographs I took of a Gram stain of yogurt. The purple rods
are Lactobacillus, the purple spheres are Streptococcus.
The
pink globs are casein, milk protein.
BUTTERMILK is the fermentation of milk by a culture
lactic
acid-producing Streptococcus lactis plus Leuconostoc
citrovorum
which converts lactic acid to aldehydes and ketones which gives it its
flavor and aroma.
SOUR CREAM is produced by the same bacteria as
buttermilk,
but the starting milk product is pasteurized light cream. Bacteria are
less numerous than in buttermilk.
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