National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Monitoring of the influence of commercial culture of yeasts on fermentation wine making process
Šerý, Filip ; Vojtíšková, Marie (referee) ; Vránová, Dana (advisor)
This diploma thesis focuses on isolation and taxonomic classification of yeast species isolated during the red wine (Pinot noir) fermentation. Grapes were grown under organic and integrated farming in South Moravia wine region, Czech Republic. Processing was controlled – for inoculation was used strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae BS6. Polymerase chain reaction followed by restriction fragment lenght polymorphism of PCR-amplified fragments (PCR-RFLP) was used for yeast species identification. For DNA analysis we used coding region of 5.8S ITS rDNA which was amplified using ITS1-ITS4 primers. Amplicon was digested by three restriction endonucleases - HaeIII, HinfI and HhaI. Isolates were divided into eleven groups using UPGMA cluster analysis (software BioNumerics). We identified following yeast species: Candida valida, Candida vini, Issatchenkia occidentalis, Pichia fermentans, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Zygosaccharomyces bailii. We were not able to identify some yeast species. Differences between organic and integrated farming were demonstrated with varying composition of yeast species.
Fermentované masné výrobky jako potenciální zdroj Encephalitozoon cuniculi
VECKOVÁ, Tereza
This study describes the prevalence and burden of Encephalitozoon cuniculi in pork meat and evaluates the effect of fermentation in the production of sausages on E. cuniculi infectivity for immunedeficient (SCID) and immunocompetent (BALB/c and C57BL/6) mice. Using a nested polymerase chain reaction approach, 2 of 50 slaughter pigs was found to have E. cuniculi genotype II in meat in an amount 60-250 spores per 1 g. Under experimental conditions, E. cuniculi genotype II spores (3000 spores per 1 g) in meat remained infective for mice following fermentation treatments at 24 °C for 48 hrs and consumed within two weeks after production. Based on these findings, fermented meat products should be considered as a potential source of E. cuniculi infection in humans.
Monitoring of the influence of commercial culture of yeasts on fermentation wine making process
Šerý, Filip ; Vojtíšková, Marie (referee) ; Vránová, Dana (advisor)
This diploma thesis focuses on isolation and taxonomic classification of yeast species isolated during the red wine (Pinot noir) fermentation. Grapes were grown under organic and integrated farming in South Moravia wine region, Czech Republic. Processing was controlled – for inoculation was used strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae BS6. Polymerase chain reaction followed by restriction fragment lenght polymorphism of PCR-amplified fragments (PCR-RFLP) was used for yeast species identification. For DNA analysis we used coding region of 5.8S ITS rDNA which was amplified using ITS1-ITS4 primers. Amplicon was digested by three restriction endonucleases - HaeIII, HinfI and HhaI. Isolates were divided into eleven groups using UPGMA cluster analysis (software BioNumerics). We identified following yeast species: Candida valida, Candida vini, Issatchenkia occidentalis, Pichia fermentans, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Zygosaccharomyces bailii. We were not able to identify some yeast species. Differences between organic and integrated farming were demonstrated with varying composition of yeast species.

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