Potentially Probiotic Lactiplantibacillus Plantarum Strains From Indian Foods: Isolation, Characterization and Comparative Genomics [post]

Sarvesh Surve, Dasharath Shinde, Ram Kulkarni
2021 unpublished
L. plantarum is one of the most diverse species of lactic acid bacteria found in various habitats. Here we report the isolation of two distinct strains of L. plantarum from Indian foods, one each from dhokla batter and jaggery, and analysis of their probiotic potential, technical properties, and genomic features. Both the strains were bile and acid tolerant, utilized various sugars, adhered to intestinal epithelial cells, produced exopolysaccharides, were susceptible for tetracycline,
more » ... in, and chloramphenicol, did not cause hemolysis, and exhibited antimicrobial activity against a few pathogenic bacteria. The genetic determinants of bile tolerance, cell-adhesion, bacteriocins production, riboflavin and folate biosynthesis, plant polyphenols utilization, and exopolysaccharide production were found in both the strains. One of the strains contained a large number of unique genes while the other had a simultaneous presence of glucansucrase and fructansucrase genes which is a rare trait in L. plantarum. Comparative genome analysis of 149 L. plantarum strains highlighted high variation in the cell-adhesion and sugar metabolism genes while the genomic regions for some other properties were relatively conserved. This work highlights the unique properties of our strains along with the probiotic and technically important genomic features of a large number of L. plantarum strains.
doi:10.21203/rs.3.rs-783497/v1 fatcat:e5vdfj3tqzhavacfhlhjubvtvy