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Published March 2006 | public
Journal Article

Utilization of capsaicin and vanillylamine as growth substrates by Capsicum (hot pepper)-associated bacteria

Abstract

Capsaicin contributes to the organoleptic attributes of hot peppers. Here, we show that capsaicin is utilized as a growth nutrient by certain bacteria. Enrichment cultures utilizing capsaicin were successfully initiated using Capsicum-derived plant material or leaves of tomato (a related Solanaceae) as inocula. No other sources of inoculum examined yielded positive enrichments. Of 25 isolates obtained from enrichments: all utilized 8-methylnonanoic acid; nine were found capable of degrading capsaicin as sole carbon and energy source; 11 were found capable of utilizing vanillylamine; but only two strains could use either of these latter two compounds as sole nitrogen source. Phylogenetic analysis of capsaicin degraders revealed them to be strains of Variovorax and Ralstonia, whereas the vanillylamine degraders were strains of Pseudomonas and Variovorax. Neither of the two strains isolated from one enrichment culture originally inoculated with dried pepper fruit was capable of using capsaicin as sole carbon and nitrogen source. However, good growth was achieved under such conditions when the two isolates, a strain of Variovorax paradoxus that degraded capsaicin when provided with ammonium, and a vanillylamine degrading strain of Pseudomonas putida, were cultured together. A cross-feeding of capsaicin-derived carbon and nitrogen between members of pepper-associated consortia is proposed.

Additional Information

© 2005 Society for Applied Microbiology and Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Received 5 April, 2005; revised 8 August, 2005; accepted 8 August, 2005. Article first published online: 18 Nov. 2005. Financial support was provided by the Powell Foundation, and by gifts to Caltech's Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship Program by Timothy J. Gerk (in memory of Professor Glen R. Cass) and Gordon Treweek (to honour Professor Emeritus James J. Morgan).

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023