Isolation and identifcation of milk oligosaccharide-degrading bacteria from the intestinal contents of suckling rats

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Abstract

We report the isolation of bacteria capable of degrading milk oligosaccharides from suckling infant rats. The bacteria were successfully isolated via a selective enrichment method, in which the serially diluted intestinal contents of infant rats were individually incubated in an enrichment medium containing 3′-sialyllactose (3′-SL), followed by the isolation of candidate strains from streaked agar plates and selection of 3′-SL-degrading strains using thin-layer chromatography. Subsequent genomic and phenotypic analyses identified all strains as Enterococcus gallinarum. The strains were capable of degrading both 3′-SL and 6′-SL, which was not observed with the type strain of E. gallinarum used as a reference. Furthermore, a time-course study combining high-performance anion-exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection revealed that the representative strain AH4 degraded 3′-SL completely to yield an equimolar amount of lactose and an approximately one-fourth equimolar amount of sialic acid after 24 hr of anaerobic incubation. These findings point to a possibility that the enterococci degrade rat milk oligosaccharides to “cross-feed” their degradants to other members of concomitant bacteria in the gut of the infant rat.

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Akazawa, H., Tsujikawa, Y., Fukuda, I., Suzuki, Y., Choi, M., Katayama, T., … Osawa, R. (2021). Isolation and identifcation of milk oligosaccharide-degrading bacteria from the intestinal contents of suckling rats. Bioscience of Microbiota, Food and Health, 40(1), 27–32. https://doi.org/10.12938/BMFH.2020-024

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