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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., May 1997, 1725-1731, Vol 63, No. 5
C Pelletier, C Bouley, C Cayuela, S Bouttier, P Bourlioux and MN Bellon-Fontaine
Hydrophilic and electrostatic cell surface properties of eight
Lactobacillus strains were characterized by using the microbial adhesion to
solvents method and microelectrophoresis, respectively. All strains
appeared relatively hydrophilic. The strong microbial adhesion to
chloroform, an acidic solvent, in comparison with microbial adhesion to
hexadecane, an apolar n-alkane, demonstrated the particularity of
lactobacilli to have an important electron donor and basic character and
consequently their potential ability to generate Lewis acid-base
interactions with a support. Regardless of their electrophoretic mobility
(EM), strains were in general slightly negatively charged at alkaline pH. A
pH-dependent behavior concerning cell surface charges was observed. The EM
decreased progressively with more acidic pHs for the L. casei subsp. casei
and L. paracasei subsp. paracasei strains until the isoelectric point
(IEP), i.e., the pH value for which the EM is zero. On the other hand, the
EM for the L. rhamnosus strains was stable from pH 8 to pH 3 to 4, at which
point there was a shift near the IEP. Both L. casei subsp. casei and L.
paracasei subsp. paracasei strains were characterized by an IEP of around
4, whereas L. rhamnosus strains possessed a markedly lower IEP of 2. The
present study showed that the cell surface physicochemical properties of
lactobacilli seem to be, at least in part and under certain experimental
conditions, particular to the bacterial species. Such differences detected
between species are likely to be accompanied by some particular changes in
cell wall chemical composition.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Cell surface characteristics of Lactobacillus casei subsp. casei, Lactobacillus paracasei subsp. paracasei, and Lactobacillus rhamnosus strains
Centre d'Etudes Pharmaceutiques, Departement de Microbiologie, Chatenay- Malabry, France.
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