AI Article Synopsis

  • Probiotic bacteria offer health benefits but present challenges in strain identification and quality control during production and commercialization processes.
  • Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIRS) is being explored as a fast and effective method for identifying and monitoring probiotic strains, particularly useful for real-time assessment in industrial settings.
  • The study found that FTIRS effectively distinguished different probiotic strains under varying growth conditions and confirmed the phenotypic stability of a specific strain, demonstrating its potential as a reliable quality assessment tool.

Article Abstract

Probiotic bacteria, capable of conferring benefits to the host, can present challenges in design, development, scale-up, manufacturing, commercialization, and life cycle management. Strain identification is one of the main quality parameters; nevertheless, this task can be challenging since established methodologies can lack resolution at the strain level for some microorganisms and\or are labor-intensive and time-consuming. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIRS) has been largely used for the investigation of pathogenic species in the clinical field, whereas only recently has been proposed for the identification of probiotic strains. Within the probiotic industrial production, bacterial strains can be subjected to stressful conditions that may affect genomic and phenotypic characteristics; therefore, real-time monitoring of all the sequential growth steps is requested. Considering the fast, low-cost, and high-throughput features, FTIRS is an innovative and functional technology for typing probiotic strains from bench-top experiments to large-scale industrial production, allowing the monitoring of stability and identity of probiotic strains. In this study, the discriminatory power of FTIRS was assessed for four probiotic strains grown under different conditions, including temperatures (30 and 37°C) and medium (broth and agar), after consecutive sub-culturing steps. A comparison between the generated spectra with pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) profiles was also performed. FTIRS was not only able to distinguish the strains of under different growth conditions but also to prove the phenotypic stability of type strain LP-CT after six growing steps. Regardless of the growth conditions, FTIRS spectra related to LP-CT constituted a unique hierarchical cluster, separated from the other strains. These results were confirmed by a PFGE analysis. In addition, based on FTIRS data, broth cultures demonstrated a higher reproducibility and discriminatory power with respect to agar ones. These results support the introduction of FTIRS in the probiotic industry, allowing for the step-by-step monitoring of massive microbial production while also guaranteeing the stability and purity of the probiotic strain. The proposed novel approach can constitute an impressive improvement in the probiotic manufacturing process.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9772554PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1052420DOI Listing

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