4.0 Article Proceedings Paper

Bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria: Production, purification, and food applications

Journal

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000104752

Keywords

bacteriocins; bacteriocins; food application; bacteriocins production; bacteriocins purification; lactic acid bacteria; lactic acid bacteria, antimicrobial potential

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In fermented foods, lactic acid bacteria (LAB) display numerous antimicrobial activities. This is mainly due to the production of organic acids, but also of other compounds, such as bacteriocins and antifungal peptides. Several bacteriocins with industrial potential have been purified and characterized. The kinetics of bacteriocin production by LAB in relation to process factors have been studied in detail through mathematical modeling and positive predictive microbiology. Application of bacteriocin-producing starter cultures in sourdough (to increase competitiveness), in fermented sausage (anti-listerial effect), and in cheese (anti-listerial and anti-clostridial effects), have been studied during in vitro laboratory fermentations as well as on pilot-scale level. The highly promising results of these studies underline the important role that functional, bacteriocinogenic LAB strains may play in the food industry as starter cultures, co-cultures, or bioprotective cultures, to improve food quality and safety. In addition, antimicrobial production by probiotic LAB might play a role during in vivo interactions occurring in the human gastrointestinal tract, hence contributing to gut health. Copyright (c) 2007 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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