4.7 Article

Combinational Antibacterial Activity of Nisin and 3-Phenyllactic Acid and Their Co-production by Engineered Lactococcus lactis

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2021.612105

Keywords

Lactococcus lactis; nisin; 3-phenyllactic acid; antimicrobial activity; food preservative; metabolic engineering

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31770076, 32070073, 31900029]
  2. National Key Research and Development Project of China [2017YFD0201400]
  3. Funds for Creative Research Groups of China [21621004]
  4. Opening Project of Key Laboratory of Storage of Agricultural Products [KF2018003]

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The combination of nisin and 3-phenyllactic acid showed excellent antibacterial activity against foodborne pathogens. Microbial analysis during storage demonstrated the potential application in food preservation. The construction of a nisin-PLA co-producing strain significantly increased the yield of PLA and demonstrated highly effective antibacterial activity.
Nisin produced by certain Lactococcus lactis strains is commercially used in meat and dairy industries because of its effective antibacterial activity and food safety characteristics. It has been proved that the antibacterial activity could be enhanced when combined with other antimicrobial agents. In this study, we demonstrated that nisin and 3-phenyllactic acid (PLA) in combination displayed excellent combinational antibacterial activity against foodborne pathogens including S. xylosus and M. luteus. The potential application in food preservation was further verified via microbial analysis during the storage of meat and milk, and determination of strawberry rot rate. Scanning electron microscopy observation indicated a distinct mode of PLA with nisin, which may target at the dividing cell, contributing to their combinational antibacterial effect of nisin and PLA. Considering the positive results, a nisin-PLA co-producing strain was constructed based on the food-grade strain L. lactis F44, a nisin Z producer. By the knockout of two L-lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and overexpression of D-LDHY25A, the yield of PLA was significantly increased 1.77-fold in comparison with the wild type. Anti-bacterial assays demonstrated that the fermentation product of the recombinant strain performed highly effective antibacterial activity. These results provided a promising prospect for the nisin-PLA co-expressing L. lactis in food preservation on account of its considerable antibacterial activity and cost-effective performance.

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