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A genetic diversity study of antifungal Lactobacillus plantarum isolates

Abstract

Lactobacillus plantarum is a lactic acid bacterium commonly found on fruits and vegetables and also used in a variety of food fermentations. Strains from this species are also regularly reported as having antifungal or probiotic activity. Genotyping methods can be used to differentiate strains of the same species thus determining if strains are related or not. However for L.\ua0plantarum, the currently used methods have limitations including DNA band profile interpretation difficulty and cost. In this study, a new genotyping method based on multi-locus variable number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) was developed and compared to a previously reported randomly amplified polymorphic DNA-PCR (RAPD-PCR) method for L.\ua0plantarum. With a selection of 13 antifungal strains of L.\ua0plantarum isolated from heterogeneous sources (cheese, silage, sauerkraut, vegetables and a probiotic product), RAPD-PCR revealed 9 different profiles resulting in a Hunter-Gaston discrimination index (D-value) of 0.94. The new MLVA method which compares the lengths of 4 repetitive regions within LPXTG motif-containing surface protein genes differentiated the 13\ua0L.\ua0plantarum strains into 10 different subtypes leading to a D-value of 0.95. Interestingly 11 additional L.\ua0plantarum isolates obtained in a previous study during a screen for antifungal activity against the common cheese spoilage mould Penicillium commune all possessed the same RAPD-PCR and MLVA profile as each other and the commercial probiotic strain L.\ua0plantarum 299v. This study demonstrates that the new MLVA method can be used to simply and inexpensively differentiate L.\ua0plantarum strains and provide information regarding strain relatedness and thus potential insight into strain properties

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