4.5 Article

Lactococcus lactis, a bacterium with probiotic functions and pathogenicity

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Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11274-023-03771-5

Keywords

Mastitis; Safe; Lactococcus lactis

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Lactococcus lactis is recognized as a safe microorganism that regulates the intestinal micro-ecological balance and improves the immune performance of animals. However, pathogenic Lactococcus lactis has been increasingly isolated from clinical cases, causing issues in dairy farming where it is used as a probiotic. This review aims to analyze the serious clinical mastitis caused by L. lactis and discuss its characteristics and diversity in the context of probiotic use.
Lactococcus lactis (L. lactis) is the primary organism for lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and is a globally recognized safe microorganism for the regulation of the intestinal micro-ecological balance of animals and improving the immune performance of the host. L. lactis is known to play a commercially important role in feed fortification, milk fermentation, and vaccine production, but pathogenic L. lactis has been isolated from many clinical cases in recent years, such as the brain of silver carp with Lactococcosis, the liver and spleen of diseased waterfowl, milk samples and padding materials with cow mastitis, and blood and urine from human patients with endocarditis. In dairy farming, where L. lactis has been used as a probiotic in the past, however, some studies have found that L. lactis can cause mastitis in cows, but the lack of understanding of the pathogenesis of mastitis in cows caused by L. lactis has become a new problem. The main objective of this review is to analyze the increasingly serious clinical mastitis caused by L. lactis and combined with the wide application of L. lactis as probiotics, to comprehensively discuss the characteristics and diversity of L. lactis.

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