Bacteriocin Production and Different Strategies for Their Recovery and Purification

Bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are a diverse group of antimicrobial proteins/peptides, offering potential as biopreservatives, and exhibit a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity at low concentrations along with thermal as well as pH stability in foods. High bacteriocin production u...

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Published inProbiotics and antimicrobial proteins Vol. 6; no. 1; pp. 47 - 58
Main Authors Garsa, Anita Kumari, Kumariya, Rashmi, Sood, S. K, Kumar, Anil, Kapila, Suman
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Boston Springer-Verlag 01.03.2014
Springer US
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ISSN1867-1306
1867-1314
1867-1314
DOI10.1007/s12602-013-9153-z

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Summary:Bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are a diverse group of antimicrobial proteins/peptides, offering potential as biopreservatives, and exhibit a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity at low concentrations along with thermal as well as pH stability in foods. High bacteriocin production usually occurs in complex media. However, such media are expensive for an economical production process. For effective use of bacteriocins as food biopreservatives, there is a need to have heat-stable wide spectrum bacteriocins produced with high-specific activity in food-grade medium. The main hurdles concerning the application of bacteriocins as food biopreservatives is their low yield in food-grade medium and time-consuming, expensive purification processes, which are suitable at laboratory scale but not at industrial scale. So, the present review focuses on the bacteriocins production using complex and food-grade media, which mainly emphasizes on the bacteriocin producer strains, media used, different production systems used and effect of different fermentation conditions on the bacteriocin production. In addition, this review emphasizes the purification processes designed for efficient recovery of bacteriocins at small and large scale.
Bibliography:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12602-013-9153-z
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ISSN:1867-1306
1867-1314
1867-1314
DOI:10.1007/s12602-013-9153-z