Skip to menu Skip to content Skip to footer
News

Researchers unlock cheesemaking secret

17 August 2017
The discovery is important for industrial cheesemaking. iStockphoto
The discovery is important for industrial cheesemaking. iStockphoto

Researchers say their new knowledge on the inner workings of a bacterium has important implications for Australia’s billion dollar cheese industry.

University of Queensland School of Agriculture and Food Sciences researcher Associate Professor Mark Turner said a discovery by a UQ, Columbia University and University of Washington research group had explained the regulation of an enzyme in the bacterium Lactococcus, which is used as a starter culture in cheese production.

“Our research provides new insights into this industrially important food bacterium,” Dr Turner said.

“Australia produces more than a billion dollars’ worth of cheese each year, and Lactococcus is the most commonly used starter culture,” Dr Turner said.

Two UQ PhD students in Dr Turner’s food microbiology research laboratory – Thu Vu and Huong Pham – identified that the enzyme known as pyruvate carboxylase was essential for efficient milk acidification, an important industrial trait in Lactococcus starter cultures. 

Dr Turner said the enzyme was essential for synthesising the amino acid aspartate, and bacteria defective in the enzyme were unable to produce high levels of lactic acid in milk, which is required for the first stage of cheese making. 

“Our collaboration also found that a recently discovered small molecule in bacteria, called cyclic-di-AMP, directly binds to and inhibits the pyruvate carboxylase enzyme”.

“The molecule is essential for growth in a wide range of bacteria, including many human pathogens, and we are only in the early stages of understanding how it controls important processes in bacteria.”

This project was funded at UQ by an ARC Linkage Project, “Smarter fermentations through starter culture genomics”, and co-funded by Dairy Innovation Australia Limited.

Dr Turner this year won the 2017 Australian Institute of Food Science and Technology Keith Farrer Award of Merit, which recognises achievements in food science and technology in research, industry and education.

The research is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (doi 10.1073/pnas.1704756114).

Media: Associate Professor Mark Turner, m.turner2@uq.edu.au, +61 7 3365 7364.

 

Related articles

Row of historic mid-rise apartment buildings with red and cream brick facades, featuring decorative stonework and black metal fire escapes, lined along a tree-filled street with yellow-green foliage.
Analysis

‘Forever renting’ is common in New York, California and Europe. What lessons can we learn?

For a growing swathe of Australians, “forever renting” has become the new norm. Given these circumstances, how do we get housing security for renters? What can we learn from rental market regulations elsewhere?
21 May 2026
A close up of a man holding two passionfruits that have been cut in half

Bigger, tastier and longer lasting passionfruit in the pipeline

New and improved varieties of passionfruit developed by UQ could be available to commercial growers as soon as next year.
21 May 2026

Media contact

Subscribe to UQ News

Get the latest from our newsroom.