Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Gardiner, G,Ross, RP,Collins, JK,Fitzgerald, G,Stanton, C;
1998
June
Applied and Environmental Microbiology
Development of a probiotic cheddar cheese containing human-derived Lactobacillus paracasei strains
Validated
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Optional Fields
LACTIC-ACID BACTERIA NONSTARTER LACTOBACILLI BIFIDOBACTERIUM-BIFIDUM ADJUNCT LACTOBACILLI MANUFACTURE ACIDOPHILUS IDENTIFICATION GROWTH MILK
64
2192
2199
Cheddar cheese was manufactured with either Lactobacillus salivarius NFBC 310, NFBC 321, or NFBC 348 or L. paracasei NFBC 338 or NFBC 364 as the dairy starter adjunct. These five strains had previously beers isolated from the human small intestine and have been characterized extensively with respect to their probiotic potential. Enumeration. of these strains in mature Cheddar cheese, however, was complicated by the presence of high numbers (>10(7) CFU/g of cheese) of nonstarter lactic acid bacteria, principally composed of lactobacilli which proliferate as the cheese ripens. Attempts to differentiate the adjunct lactobacilli from the nonstarter lactobacilli based on bile tolerance and growth temperature were unsuccessful. Ire contrast, the randomly amplified polymorphic DNA method allowed the generation of discrete DNA fingerprints for each strain which were clearly distinguishable from those generated from the natural flora of the cheeses. Using this approach, it was found that both L. paracasei strains grew and sustained high viability in cheese during ripening, while each of the L. salivarius species declined over the ripening period. These data demonstrate that Cheddar cheese can be an effective vehicle for delivery of some probiotic organisms to the consumer.
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