6533b824fe1ef96bd1280155

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The coffee-machine bacteriome: biodiversity and colonisation of the wasted coffee tray leach

Cristina VilanovaManuel PorcarAlba Iglesias

subject

Food HandlingMicrobial ConsortiaBiodiversityAgrobacteriumBiologyCoffeeArticleBioremediationEnterobacteriaceaeCaffeinePseudomonasRNA Ribosomal 16SColonizationMicrobiomeMultidisciplinaryDecaffeinationEcologybusiness.industryBacteriomeBiodiversitySequence Analysis DNAbiology.organism_classificationAdaptation PhysiologicalBiotechnologyAnti-Bacterial AgentsColonisationBiodegradation EnvironmentalMicroscopy Electron ScanningbusinessPaenibacillusBacteriaEnterococcus

description

AbstractMicrobial communities are ubiquitous in both natural and artificial environments. However, microbial diversity is usually reduced under strong selection pressures, such as those present in habitats rich in recalcitrant or toxic compounds displaying antimicrobial properties. Caffeine is a natural alkaloid present in coffee, tea and soft drinks with well-known antibacterial properties. Here we present the first systematic analysis of coffee machine-associated bacteria. We sampled the coffee waste reservoir of ten different Nespresso machines and conducted a dynamic monitoring of the colonization process in a new machine. Our results reveal the existence of a varied bacterial community in all the machines sampled and a rapid colonisation process of the coffee leach. The community developed from a pioneering pool of enterobacteria and other opportunistic taxa to a mature but still highly variable microbiome rich in coffee-adapted bacteria. The bacterial communities described here, for the first time, are potential drivers of biotechnologically relevant processes including decaffeination and bioremediation.

10.1038/srep17163http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/srep17163