Pesticide and Environmental Update
Plant
Extracts To Conquer Microbes
Tender leaves of deep-green, freshly harvested
spinach—neatly displayed in sealed bags at the chilled-produce section
of your local supermarket—may one day include a powerful new food-safety
feature. That added protection might take shape as a
five-thousandths-of-an-inch-thick piece of what’s known as “edible
film,” made from a purée of spinach itself.
When slipped into the bag, the protective power of
this little puréed spinach square or wedge would come from a potent
antimicrobial compound chosen from nature’s bounty of botanical
bactericides. The antimicrobial would be added in tiny amounts during the
puréeing process to provide a safe, effective, natural defense against
pathogens like E. coli O157:H7, Salmonella, Listeria, and others.
Carvacrol, the predominant essential oil in oregano,
would add a pleasant—and protective—accent to a spinach-purée film,
for example. Already shown in lab investigations to be an effective weapon
against several major foodborne pathogens, carvacrol currently flavors
some popular salad dressings and seasoning mixes. Carvacrol vapors wafting
from the wedge into the atmosphere inside the sealed bag would both season
and safen the spinach.
Sound too good to be true?
Not so, say scientists at the ARS Western Regional
Research Center in Albany, California, near San Francisco. The futuristic
films they’re developing would complement and supplement other
food-safety strategies and tactics on the farm, at the packinghouse, and
elsewhere along the way from field to fork.
In pioneering experiments, the California scientists
are selecting plant extracts, such as carvacrol, to put in the
experimental films and are then pitting the films against pathogenic
bacteria such as E. coli O157:H7. Their investigations will help transform
edible antimicrobial films from concept to reality.
Though wrinkles remain to be ironed out, their
findings from films made with purées of Golden Delicious or Fuji apples
provide proof that the concept is sound, that the botanical extracts are
powerful, and that practical, affordable films are within technology’s
reach.
The experiments are the work of Tara H. McHugh and
Wen-Xian Du of the center’s Processed Foods Research Unit; Mendel
Friedman of the Produce Safety and Microbiology Research Unit, also at
Albany; Roberto J. Avena-Bustillos of the University of California-Davis,
and others.
Initial Results Promising
Neither edible films—nor the idea of making them
antimicrobial—are new. McHugh’s work that led to the first-ever
fruit-purée edible films, for instance, is based on a pending patent that
she and coinventors filed in 2004. What is new is research from the Albany
lab that shows, for the first time, that those same puréed-apple films—if
enhanced with carvacrol—can kill E. coli O157:H7 in laboratory tests.
Their suite of apple-purée studies can, the scientists point out, smooth
the way to films that could be used to protect fresh-cut leafy greens—spinach,
lettuce, and more.
Hundreds of Compounds Scrutinized
Carvacrol was one of more than 200 botanical
extracts that Friedman, a chemist, analyzed in a globe-spanning study
published in 2002. Other studies of the pathogen-fighting prowess of plant
oils and oil compounds abound. But the methods used to prepare those
compounds for assays vary widely, as do the assays themselves, the strains
of any given bacteria that were used, and other scientific variables.
“These earlier studies gave us a wealth of data,”
says Friedman, “but there was no common basis of comparison for us to
work forward from.”
To remedy that, Friedman and co-researchers used new
sample-preparation and assay methods that they invented. For even more
consistency, they used the same bacterial strains, from the same
suppliers, across the investigation.
Their exhaustive study put plant compounds—from
everyday allspice to exotic frankincense—up against four big-time
bacterial bad guys: Campylobacter jejuni, E. coli, Salmonella, and
Listeria.
The study also delved into the relation of chemical
structure to a bactericide’s pathogen-quelling ability. The
investigation was, at the time, the most extensive of its kind, according
to Friedman.
Many of the compounds examined are already approved
for food use—an important bonus in choosing candidates for the
experimental films.
Top scores for compounds like oregano’s carvacrol,
citral from lemongrass, and cinnamaldehyde from cinnamon earned them a
place in the subsequent tests of apple-purée films.
Vapors Go In, Out, Under
Importantly, some of the compounds Friedman studied—including
carvacrol—have what’s called a “vapor phase.” Inside the enclosed
environment of a packaged salad mix, carvacrol’s protective vapors could
find their way into folds and crevices—like those on a crinkly spinach
leaf—that other protectants might not reach.
So how do you gauge a film’s ability to fight a
foodborne pathogen?
In several studies, extract-enhanced apple films
were cut into small disks, each a half-inch in diameter. Then, the disks
were put on agar gel teeming with E. coli. The samples, kept chilled, were
checked at intervals to see the disks’ effects on the growth and spread
of the pathogen.
As an indicator of bactericidal strength, the
researchers measured the zone around the disk in which no living E. coli
could be detected. The approach is somewhat like measuring the size of the
egg white surrounding the yolk of a fried egg.
The protective zone encircling oregano-impregnated
apple purée disks was significantly larger than those of disks containing
cinnamon or lemongrass oils, the scientists found.
A related study showed that it took nearly five
times as much citral from lemongrass to get the same protective effect as
oregano-derived carvacrol.
In their newest work, published in a recent issue of
the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, Du, Friedman, McHugh, and
coinvestigators designed a study to answer a key question about making
films: Could the manufacturing process—batch or continuous—affect a
film’s antimicrobial performance?
For carvacrol, the antibacterial used in the study,
the answer is: No. Carvacrol-enhanced apple purée films made with a batch
process were about as effective in quelling E. coli as those made with a
continuous process, according to preliminary results.
McHugh and Friedman estimate that antimicrobial film
inserts for packaged leafy greens—a spinach-purée wedge, a colorful
square of carrot-based film, or other innovative options—might be ready
within a year or so to test and evaluate at fresh-produce packinghouses.
The inserts would add a reassuring new leaf to the history of packaged,
ready-to-eat salads in America.—By Marcia Wood, Agricultural Research
Service Information Staff.
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