Characterisation of antimicrobial producing lactic acid bacteria from Malted Barley

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Abstract

Thirty-three putative inhibitor-producing lactic acid bacteria (LAB) were isolated from malted barley based on their ability to inhibit growth of two indicator strains. Eleven of the inhibitor-producing LAB produced an antimicrobial activity which was active across a wide pH range, relatively insensitive to heat treatment while sensitive to treatment with proteolytic enzymes indicating that the inhibitory compounds are proteinaceous in nature and therefore bacteriocin-like inhibitory substances. Ten of these eleven malt isolates were observed to secrete the inhibitory compounds into the cell-free supernatant with optimal production occurring in the late exponential growth phase. The inhibitory spectra of these isolates included various Gram-positive bacteria among which a variety of beer-spoiling bacteria.

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O’Mahony, A., O’Sullivan, T., Walsh, Y., Vaughan, A., Maher, M., Fitzgerald, G. F., & van Sinderen, D. (2000). Characterisation of antimicrobial producing lactic acid bacteria from Malted Barley. Journal of the Institute of Brewing, 106(6), 403–410. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2050-0416.2000.tb00531.x

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