Food-grade lactic acid bacteria and probiotics as a potential protective tool against erythrotoxic dietary xenobiotics

Author(s):  
Paúl F. Cuevas-González ◽  
Audry Peredo-Lovillo ◽  
Cecilia Castro-López ◽  
Belinda Vallejo-Cordoba ◽  
Aarón F. González-Córdova ◽  
...  
2002 ◽  
Vol 68 (11) ◽  
pp. 5663-5670 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter A. Bron ◽  
Marcos G. Benchimol ◽  
Jolanda Lambert ◽  
Emmanuelle Palumbo ◽  
Marie Deghorain ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Both Lactococcus lactis and Lactobacillus plantarum contain a single alr gene, encoding an alanine racemase (EC 5.1.1.1), which catalyzes the interconversion of d-alanine and l-alanine. The alr genes of these lactic acid bacteria were investigated for their application as food-grade selection markers in a heterologous complementation approach. Since isogenic mutants of both species carrying an alr deletion (Δalr) showed auxotrophy for d-alanine, plasmids carrying a heterologous alr were constructed and could be selected, since they complemented d-alanine auxotrophy in the L. plantarum Δalr and L. lactis Δalr strains. Selection was found to be highly stringent, and plasmids were stably maintained over 200 generations of culturing. Moreover, the plasmids carrying the heterologous alr genes could be stably maintained in wild-type strains of L. plantarum and L. lactis by selection for resistance to d-cycloserine, a competitive inhibitor of Alr (600 and 200 μg/ml, respectively). In addition, a plasmid carrying the L. plantarum alr gene under control of the regulated nisA promoter was constructed to demonstrate that d-cycloserine resistance of L. lactis is linearly correlated to the alr expression level. Finally, the L. lactis alr gene controlled by the nisA promoter, together with the nisin-regulatory genes nisRK, were integrated into the chromosome of L. plantarum Δalr. The resulting strain could grow in the absence of d-alanine only when expression of the alr gene was induced with nisin.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Yovani Pillay

aMasi is traditionally fermented milk that constitutes part of the South African heritage and is regarded as a supplementary staple food. Its inclusion into the South African Food Based Dietary Guidelines has led to the encouraged consumption of this product. Given the fact that aMasi is a rich source of lactic acid bacteria (LAB), such bacteria are of economic importance to the food, feed and pharmaceutical industries. The main concern regarding food safety is ability to acquire and disseminate antibiotic-resistant genes. Although LAB bility of resistance genes to human and animal opportunistic and pathogenic bacteria which could make treatment of bacterial infections more complex to treat in the future. Numerous reports globally, have documented antibiotic resistance among LAB isolated from commercial dairy and pharmaceutical products over the last decade. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine if LAB isolated from commercial aMasi samples harbour antibiotic-resistant genes. To achieve this aim, the total bacterial population and LAB population of 10 aMasi samples were surveyed using culture-dependent techniques and the proportional prevalence of LAB to the total bacterial population were determined by using a 100% stacked-column. In all 10 samples, LAB was the predominating population ranging from 87.44% to 99.77%. A total of 30 LAB isolates were characterised after isolation and sequencing of 16S rDNA of these isolates showed that LAB were Leuconostoc pseudomesenteroides and Leuconostoc mesenteroides with two isolates being identified as Lactococcus lactis CP028160.1. The relationship between the growth of LAB and selected physicochemical properties (pH, titratable acidity, water activity (aw), moisture content, fat content and estimation of reducing sugars (lactose)) were determined using principal component analysis (PCA) and classification and regression tree (CART) to illustrate the likelihood of LAB present in aMasi samples based on LAB count and pH. From the PCA results, approximately 75.25% of variances in the data were retained by the first three principal components (PCs). The first principal component (PC1) had accounted for the highest total variance of 33.16%. PC1 increased with an increase in lactic acid % and aw, whilst it negatively correlated with LAB count, moisture % and lactose (mg/25ml lactose·H2O). The results showed an increase in LAB count with an increase in moisture % and lactose (mg/25ml lactose·H2O) whilst, LAB count had decreased with an increase in lactic acid % and aw. Moreover, pH and fat % had no effect on PC1, high LAB counts were observed for samples 6 and 7 whist low LAB counts were observed for samples 9 and 10. On the other hand, PC2 had accounted for approximately 27.53% of the total variance. PC2 increased with an increase in fat % and lactose (mg/25ml lactose·H2O), whilst it negatively correlated with LAB count and pH. It was observed that the growth of LAB had increased with an increase in pH, whilst it decreased with an increase in fat % and lactose (mg/25ml lactose·H2O). Moreover, lactic acid %, aw and moisture % had no effect on PC2. High LAB counts were observed for samples 7 and 8 and low LAB counts were observed for samples 2 and 4. Nine out of the 30 LAB isolates were selected due to these isolates having a different GenBank Accession number and were subjected to antibiotic susceptibility testing using the disc diffusion method against a total of 11 antibiotics. Most of the LAB isolates exhibited multiple resistance towards some of the most commonly used antibiotics as well as last-resort antibiotics. All the isolates showed high levels of resistance towards vancomycin, colistin sulphate, fosfomycin and pipemidic acid except for Lactococcus lactis CP028160.1 which was susceptible to vancomycin. All isolates were susceptible to tetracycline and erythromycin whilst eight out of nine isolates were susceptible to chloramphenicol with seven out of nine isolates being susceptible to ampicillin. Furthermore, the isolates had displayed intermediate resistance mainly towards kanamycin and streptomycin. The present study showed that multiple antibiotic resistance is prevalent in different species of starter culture strains, which may pose a food safety concern. LAB that exhibit phenotypic resistance to antibiotics should also be evaluated on a molecular level to monitor their resistance. The presence of such a variety of expressed AR genes in probiotic isolates is a worrying trend. The impact of the interactions of these bacteria with pathogenic strains and their transfer of these AR genes is yet to be assessed. Furthermore, antibiotic sensitivity is an important criterion in the safety assessment for the evaluation of food-grade and potential food-grade LAB.


Biologia ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 71 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Parichat Phumkhachorn ◽  
Pongsak Rattanachaikunsopon

AbstractThe genetic modification of lactic acid bacteria being used in medicine and food industries has been limited due to the scarcity of food-grade cloning vectors for the bacteria. The 4.46-kb food-grade cloning vector pUBU constructed in this study consisted of 3 major components from food-approved organisms, the theta-type replicon from pUCL287 of


Foods ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 939
Author(s):  
Ewa Baranowska-Wójcik ◽  
Klaudia Gustaw ◽  
Dominik Szwajgier ◽  
Patryk Oleszczuk ◽  
Bożena Pawlikowska-Pawlęga ◽  
...  

Food-grade titanium dioxide (TiO2) containing a nanoparticle fraction (TiO2 NPs -nanoparticles) is widely used as a food additive (E171 in the EU). In recent years, it has increasingly been raising controversies as to the presence or absence of its harmful effects on the gastrointestinal microbiota. The complexity and variability of microbiota species present in the human gastrointestinal tract impede the assessment of the impact of food additives on this ecosystem. As unicellular organisms, bacteria are a very convenient research model for investigation of the toxicity of nanoparticles. We examined the effect of TiO2 (three types of food-grade E171 and one TiO2 NPs, 21 nm) on the growth of 17 strains of lactic acid bacteria colonizing the human digestive tract. Each bacterial strain was treated with TiO2 at four concentrations (60, 150, 300, and 600 mg/L TiO2). The differences in the growth of the individual strains were caused by the type and concentration of TiO2. It was shown that the growth of a majority of the analyzed strains was decreased by the application of E171 and TiO2 NPs already at the concentration of 150 and 300 mg/L. At the highest dose (600 mg/L) of the nanoparticles, the reactions of the bacteria to the different TiO2 types used in the experiment varied.


2002 ◽  
Vol 68 (12) ◽  
pp. 6451-6456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franck Biet ◽  
Yves Cenatiempo ◽  
Christophe Fremaux

ABSTRACT A 2,665-bp cryptic plasmid, pTXL1, isolated from Leuconostoc mesenteroides subsp. mesenteroides Y110 was identified. This plasmid harbors a replicon localized on a 1,300-bp fragment. Two observations suggested that pTXL1 does not belong to rolling-circle replication (RCR)-type plasmids and most likely replicates via a theta mechanism. These hypotheses are supported by the observation that no detectable single-stranded intermediate was found for the replicon and that, unlike in RCR-type plasmids, the pTXL1 replicon sequence lacks an open reading frame encoding a replicase. The small-sized pTXL1 plasmid is stable and, according to its origin, can be considered in the “generally recognized as safe” category. Its ability to replicate in several lactic acid bacteria was exploited to develop a vector producing mesentericin Y105, a class II anti-Listeria bacteriocin. With this new vector, a recombinant industrial Leuconostoc cremoris strain able to produce mesentericin Y105 was constructed.


2012 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 499 ◽  
Author(s):  
Song He ◽  
Fanghong Gong ◽  
Yanan Guo ◽  
Dechun Zhang

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