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Growth studies of dominant lactic acid bacteria in orange juice and selection of strains to ferment citric fruit juices with probiotic potential.

The study aimed to evaluate the ability of dominant lactic acid bacteria (LAB) in orange juice to growth on N-depleted MRS medium supplemented or not with cysteine (mMRS), then to select the most nutritionally promising strains for growth assays in the food matrix and evaluation of beneficial attributes for fruit juice fermentation. Levilactobacillus brevis and Lactiplantibacillus plantarum were dominant species among the total of 103 LAB isolates as confirmed by multiplex PCR and/or 16 s rDNA sequence analysis. Based on growing lower than 20% and higher than 70% in mMRS (1.0 g/l meat extract, without peptone and yeast extract) with and without cysteine requirement, one L. brevis (JNB23) and two L. plantarum (JNB21 and JNB25) were selected. These bacteria and the L. plantarum strains N4 and N8 (previously isolated from oranges peel) when inoculated in orange juice grew up to 1.0 log cfu/ml for 24 h incubation at 30 °C and mainly produced lactic acid, with strains JNB25 and JNB23 reaching the highest and lowest cell densities in agreement with their nutritional exigency. In addition, all L. plantarum strains exhibited antagonistic activity against the majority of tested bacterial pathogens (in opposition to L. brevis), ability to grow or survive to pH 3.0 for 3 h, to grow with 0.5% sodium taurocholate, and a decrease after simulated gastrointestinal digestion assay which did not exceed 1.0 or 2.0 log units, depending on the strain. Thus, autochthonous L. plantarum strains with ability for overcoming nutritional limitations and beneficial attributes are promising candidates for further investigations as novel probiotic and/or preservative starters to ferment citric fruit juices.

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