1914
DOI: 10.33915/agnic.146
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The Effect of Pressure on Certain Micro-Organisms Encountered in the Preservation of Fruits and Vegetables

Abstract: A preliminary report of the effects of pressure in the pre---servation of milk was published as Bulletin 56 of this Experiment Station. The work therein reported was continued until hope of preventing certain slow changes in the milk had to be -abandoned. The changes were due to enzymes which the pressure could not destroy. The writers are now studying the effect of pressure on enzymes and have shown that the .activity of some milk enzymes is not destroyed by a pressure of 100,000 pounds per square inch, at ro… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…At the quite acid pH of 4.63 the pressure diminution of luminescence became slightly greater with increase in pressure, and the effects were not appreciably reversible, on release of pressure, over short periods of observation. The irreversible, or only slowly reversible effects are possibly in the protein portion of the enzyme, and may be similar to the changes which take place when the viability of bacteria is reduced and proteins are permanently denatured by high pressures (Hite, Giddings, and Weakley, 1914;Larson, Hartwell, and Diehl, 1918;Giddings, Allard, and Hite, 1929;Bridgeman, 1931;Cattell, 1936;Matthews, Dow, and Anderson, 1940. One further point calls for mention in connection with Fig. 14. It is apparent that although pressure causes no appreciable increase in brightness at this temperature and slightly alkaline reactions, pronounced increases may occur at the same temperature but in extremely alkaline media.…”
Section: T Absolutementioning
confidence: 95%
“…At the quite acid pH of 4.63 the pressure diminution of luminescence became slightly greater with increase in pressure, and the effects were not appreciably reversible, on release of pressure, over short periods of observation. The irreversible, or only slowly reversible effects are possibly in the protein portion of the enzyme, and may be similar to the changes which take place when the viability of bacteria is reduced and proteins are permanently denatured by high pressures (Hite, Giddings, and Weakley, 1914;Larson, Hartwell, and Diehl, 1918;Giddings, Allard, and Hite, 1929;Bridgeman, 1931;Cattell, 1936;Matthews, Dow, and Anderson, 1940. One further point calls for mention in connection with Fig. 14. It is apparent that although pressure causes no appreciable increase in brightness at this temperature and slightly alkaline reactions, pronounced increases may occur at the same temperature but in extremely alkaline media.…”
Section: T Absolutementioning
confidence: 95%
“…Coagulation of egg albumen via high pressure processing was reported by Bridgman (1914) and the efficacy of pressure to eliminate microorganisms in fruits and vegetables was reported by Hite (1914). In 1987, Hayashi et al introduced High Pressure Processing treatment to the food industry by examining proteolysis of beta-lactoglobulin in milk whey when subjected to high pressure.…”
Section: High Pressure Processingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main drawback for the wide development of HHP processes is however the presence of bacterial spores in some food matrices, and these latter being much more pressure resistant than their vegetative counterparts (Chlopin and Tamman 1903;Hite et al 1914;Larson et al 1918;Smelt 1998;Black et al 2007).…”
Section: Hhp Effects On Food-borne Pathogensmentioning
confidence: 99%