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    Bile-resistant derivatives obtained from non-intestinal dairy lactobacilli

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    Our aim was to obtain derivatives of non-intestinal lactobacilli鈥攃ommonly used in the dairy industry鈥攁ble to grow under physiological concentrations of bile salts. Six resistant derivatives (five from Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. lactis and one from L. acidophilus) growing in the presence of 0.5% bile salts were obtained from 24 strains of L. delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, L. delbrueckii subsp. lactis and L. helveticus, and also one strain of L. acidophilus with low resistance to bile salts. Carbohydrate fermentation profiles remained unchanged but the rate of fermentation of several sugars was generally slower in bile-resistant derivatives. No significant differences with respect to the parent strains were observed for the cell-wall hydrophobicity, capacity to grow in milk and survival during frozen storage. Some bile-resistant derivatives were also resistant to low pH, but in other strains this capacity was acquired following progressive adaptation to low pH. Adaptation to bile salts and low pH might be valuable tools for increasing the survival under gastrointestinal conditions of non-intestinal lactobacilli used for the manufacture of dairy productsThis work was supported by the Programaci贸n CAI+D 2006 37-203 from the Universidad Nacional del Litoral (Santa Fe, Argentina), by the Proyecto PICT 2004, No. 09 20358 and PICT J贸venes 2005 BID 1728 OC/AR No. 32118 from the Agencia Nacional de Promoci贸n Cient铆fica y Tecnol贸gica (ANPCyT).Peer reviewe
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