Effect of Long-Term Storage on Mycobiota of Barley Grain and Malt

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Date
2021-08-11Author
Felšöciová, Sona
Kowalczewski, Przemysław Łukasz
Krajcovic, Tomáš
Dráb, Štefan
Kacániová, Miroslava
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Contamination of malting barley grain and malt with micromycetes sampled at various
periods post-harvest (3rd, 6th, and 9th month of storage) and types of storage (storage silo and
floor warehouse) was investigated. Each of these barley grain samples was malted. This article
reports on the changes in the fungal microbiome composition and their overall count in barley grain
and malt. From the surface-disinfected barley grain samples collected immediately after harvest,
there were eight genera isolated, with a predominance of Alternaria. A small increase of isolated
microfungi was detected in barley stored in silo for 3 and 6 months (from 142 isolates to 149) and
decreased below the number of isolates in barley before storage (133 isolates). Fungal count during
storage gradually decreased up to 9 month in barley stored in floor warehouse (from 142 isolates to
84). The initial total count of microscopic fungi in malt before storage was the highest (112 isolates)
with 7 genera detected, compared to malts prepared from barley stored for longer time (54 isolates,
7 genera, 9th month of storage). Alternaria was the most abundant and frequent genus. Quantitative
representation of the filamentous microscopic fungi was lower compared to yeasts especially in
barley and malt prepared from barley stored at third month of storage in both type of storage. Yeasts
were identified from all grain samples and malt samples with mass spectrometry. Most attention was
given to the widely distributed fungus Penicillium, 79% of strains produced at least one mycotoxin
detected under in vitro assays using the TLC method (97% of them produced griseofulvin, 94% CPA,
79% patulin, 14% roquefortin C, and penitrem A was produced by two screening strains under
laboratory conditions). It is therefore important to monitor the microflora throughout the production
cycle of “barley to beer”.
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