Characterization of lactic acid bacteria isolated from seafood |
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Authors: | Sylvie Mauguin G. Novel |
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Affiliation: | ENITIAA, Laboratoire de Microbiologie and University of Caen, Laboratoire de Génétique Microbienne, France |
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Abstract: | Lactic acid bacteria were isolated from various samples of seafood: fresh pollock, brine shrimp, gravad fish, vacuum-packed seafood (surimi, smoked tuna, salted cod), and fish stored under 100% CO2 at 5°C (smoked tuna, fresh and salted cod, salmon). Eighty-six independent isolates were obtained and were grouped according to cell morphology, presence or absence of diaminopimelic acid in the cell wall, and lactate configuration. Fifty-four isolates were identified as belonging to the genus Lactococcus and most of them exhibited DNA homologies with L. lactis subsp. lactis. Four strains were identified as Lactobacillus plantarum , eight strains as genus Leuconostoc and 16 belonged to the genus Carnobacterium. One facultative heterofermentative Lactobacillus and three other isolates were not identified. Of the strains 47% showed similar patterns of carbohydrate fermentations especially among strains belonging to the genera Lactococcus and Carnobacterium. Most of the strains (64%) grew at 5°C, in salted media and in fish extract medium without added sugar. Carnobacterium piscicola and Carn. divergens were the only reference strains able to grow in the same conditions as well as psychrotroph strains isolated from seafood. A numerical analysis could not be used because of the divergent properties of isolates of the same genus and strong similarities between different genera. |
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