While the detrimental effect of bacteriophages on lactic acid bacterial fermentation is well documented, the importance of Bacillus subtilis phages in soybean-based fermented foods is not. In this study, we show for the first time that 100% of Korean soybean-based fermented foods (Doenjang, Gochujang, and Cheonggukjang) and 70% of raw materials (Meju and rice straw) were contaminated with B. subtilis-infecting phages (as high as 3.7 × 104 PFU g-1). Among 15 isolated B. subtilis-infecting phages, BSP18 was selected for further studies due to its specificity to and relatively broad host infectivity (34%) against B. subtilis. This Myoviridae family phage, BSP18 could infect all of the tested wild-type and commercially-used strains for soybean-based fermented food preparation. Furthermore, artificial contamination of as low as 102 PFU g-1 of BSP18 significantly inhibited B. subtilis growth during Cheonggukjang fermentation. Moreover, phage-treated samples contained considerably more degraded γ-PGA which could negatively affect the functional property of Cheonggukjang. We also present the data, strongly suggesting BSP18-encoded, not bacterial, γ-PGA hydrolase was responsible for γ-PGA degradation. In conclusion, B. subtilis phages are widespread in Korean soybean-based fermented foods and it should be of great concern as phages may hamper the bacterial growth during fermentation and yield poor quality products.
Keywords: B. subtilis phages; Contamination; Prevalence; Soybean-based fermented foods; γ-PGA; γ-PGA hydrolase.
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