Lactobacillus is a genus of gram-positive, aerotolerant anaerobes or microaerophilic, rod-shaped, non-endospore-forming bacteria. Until 2020, the genus Lactobacillus comprised over 260 phylogenetically, ecologically, and metabolically diverse species; a taxonomic revision of the genus assigned lactobacilli to 25 genera (see below).
Lactobacillus species constitute a significant component of the human and animal human microbiota at a number of body sites, such as the digestive system and the female genital system. In women of European ancestry, Lactobacillus species are normally a major part of the vaginal microbiota. Lactobacillus forms in the and gut flora, allowing them to persist in harsh environmental conditions and maintain ample populations. Lactobacillus exhibits a mutualistic relationship with the human body, as it protects the host against potential by , and in turn, the host provides a source of nutrients. Lactobacilli are among the most common probiotic found in food such as yogurt, and the bacteria are diverse in their application in maintaining human well-being, by helping to treat diarrhea, vaginal infections, and skin disorders such as eczema.
The Lactobacillaceae are the only family of the lactic acid bacteria (LAB) that includes homofermentative and heterofermentative organisms; in the Lactobacillaceae, homofermentative or heterofermentative metabolism is shared by all strains of a genus. Lactobacillus species are all homofermentative, do not express pyruvate formate lyase, and most species do not ferment pentoses. In L. crispatus, pentose metabolism is strain specific and acquired by lateral gene transfer.
+The 23 New Genera of 2020 !Genus !Meaning of the genus name !Properties of the genus | ||
Lactobacillus | Rod-shaped bacillus from milk | Type species: L. delbrueckii. Homofermentative with strain-specific ability to ferment pentoses, thermophilic, vancomycin-sensitive, adapted to vertebrate or insect hosts. |
Holzapfelia | Wilhelm Holzapfel's lactobacilli | Type species: H. floricola. Homofermentative, vancomycin sensitive, unknown ecology but likely host-adapted. |
Amylolactobacillus | Starch-degrading lactobacilli | Type species: A. amylophilus. Homofermentative, vancomycin sensitive, extracellular amylases are frequent, unknown ecology but likely host-adapted. |
Bombilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from bees and bumblebees | Type species: B. mellifer. Homofermentative, thermophilic, vancomycin resistant, small genome size, adapted to bees and bumblebees |
Companilactobacillus | Companion-lactobacillus, referring to them growing in association with other lactobacilli in cereal, meat and vegetable fermentations | Type species: C. alimentarius. Homofermentative with strain- or species-specific ability to ferment pentoses, vancomycin resistant, unknown ecology, likely nomadic |
Lapidilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from stones | Type species: L. concavus. Homofermentative with strain- or species-specific ability to ferment pentoses, vancomycin resistant, unknown ecology. |
Agrilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from fields | Type species: A. composti. Homofermentative, aerotolerant and vancomycin resistant. Genome size, G+C content of the genome and the source of the two species suggest a free-living lifestyle of the genus. |
Schleiferilactobacillus | Karl Heinz Schleifer’s lactobacilli | Type species: S. perolens. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant, aerotolerant. Schleiferilactobacillus spp. have a large genome size, ferment a wide range of carbohydrates, and spoil beer and dairy products by copious production of diacetyl. |
Loigolactobacillus | (Food) spoiling lactobacilli | Type species: L. coryniformis. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant, mesophilic or psychrotrophic organisms. |
Lacticaseibacillus | Lactobacilli related to cheese | Type species: L. casei. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant; many species ferment pentoses, and are resistant to oxidative stress. L. casei and related species have a nomadic lifestyle. |
Latilactobacillus | Widespread lactobacilli | Type species: L. sakei. Homofermentative, mesophilic free living and environmental lactobacilli. Many strains are psychrotrophic and grow below 8 °C. |
Dellaglioa | Franco Dellaglio’s lactobacilli | Type species: D. algidus. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant, aerotolerant and psychrophilic. |
Liquorilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from liquor or liquids | Type species: L. mali. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant, motile organisms growing in liquid, plant-associated habitats. Many liquorilactobacilli produce EPS from sucrose and degrade fructans with extracellular fructanases. |
Ligilactobacillus | Uniting (host adapted) lactobacilli | Type species: L. salivarius. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant, most ligilactobacilli are host adapted and many strains are motile. Several strains of Ligilactobacillus express urease to withstand gastric acidity. |
Lactiplantibacillus | Lactobacilli related to plants | Type species: L. plantarum. Homofermentative, vancomycin resistant organisms with a nomadic lifestyle that ferment a wide range of carbohydrates; most species metabolise phenolic acids by esterase, decarboxylase and reductase activities. L. plantarum expresses pseudocatalase and nitrate reductase activities. |
Furfurilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from bran | Type species: F. rossiae. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, with large genome size, broad metabolic potential and unknown ecology. |
Paucilactobacillus | Lactobacilli fermenting few carbohydrates | Type species: P. vaccinostercus. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, mesophilic or psychrotrophic, aerotolerant, most strains ferment pentoses but not disaccharides. |
Limosilactobacillus | Slimy (biofilm-forming) lactobacilli | Type species: L. fermentum. Heterofermentative, thermophilic, vancomycin resistant with two exceptions, Limosilactobacillus species are vertebrate host adapted and generally form exopolysaccharides from sucrose to support biofilm formation in the upper intestine of animals. |
Fructilactobacillus | Fructose-loving lactobacilli | Type species: F. fructivorans. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, mesophilic, aerotolerant, small genome size. Fructilactobacilli are adapted to narrow ecological niches that relate to insects, flowers, or both. |
Acetilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from vinegar | Type species: A. jinshani. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, grow in the pH range of 3–5; fermenting disaccharides and sugar alcohols but few hexoses and no pentoses. |
Apilactobacillus | Lactobacilli from bees | Type species: A. kunkeei. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, small genome size, fermenting only few carbohydrates, adapted to bees and/or flowers. |
Levilactobacillus | (Dough)-leavening lactobacilli | Type species: L. brevis. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, mesophilic or psychrotrophic, metabolise agmatine, environmental or plant-associated lifestyle. |
Secundilactobacillus | Second lactobacilli, growing after other organisms depleted hexoses | Type species: S. collinoides. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, mesophilic or psychrotrophic, environmental or plant-associated lifestyle. Adapted to hexose-depleted habitats, most strains do not reduce fructose to mannitol but metabolize agmatine and diols. |
Lentilactobacillus | Slow (growing) lactobacilli | Type species: L. buchneri. Heterofermentative, vancomycin resistant, mesophilic, fermenting a broad spectrum of carbohydrates. Most lentilactobacilli are environmental or plant-associated, metabolise agmatine and convert lactate and/or diols. L. senioris and L. kribbianus form an outgroup to the genus; both species were isolated from vertrebrates and may transition to a host-adapted lifestyle. |
Lactobacilli are also proposed to produce hydrogen peroxide, which inhibits the growth and virulence of the fungal pathogen Candida albicans in vitro, though this is arguably not the main mechanism in vivo.
In vitro studies have also shown that lactobacilli reduce the pathogenicity of C. albicans through the production of organic acids and certain metabolites. Both the presence of metabolites, such as sodium butyrate, and decrease in environmental pH caused by the organic acids reduce the growth of in C. albicans, which reduces its pathogenicity. Lactobacilli also reduce the pathogenicity of C. albicans by reducing C. albicans biofilm formation. On the other hand, following antibiotic therapy, certain Candida species can suppress the regrowth of lactobacilli at body sites where they cohabitate, such as in the gastrointestinal tract.
In addition to its effects on C. albicans, Lactobacillus sp. also interact with other pathogens. For example, Limosilactobacillus reuteri (formerly Lactobacillus reuteri) can inhibit the growth of many different bacterial species by using glycerol to produce the antimicrobial substance called reuterin. Another example is Ligilactobacillus salivarius (formerly Lactobacillus salivarius), which interacts with many pathogens through the production of salivaricin B, a bacteriocin.
Lactobacilli administered in combination with other provides benefits in cases of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), although the extent of efficacy is still uncertain. The probiotics help treat IBS by re-establishing homeostasis when the gut microbiota experiences unusually high levels of opportunistic bacteria. In addition, lactobacilli can be administered as probiotics during cases of infection by the ulcer-causing bacterium Helicobacter pylori. Helicobacter pylori is linked to cancer, and antibiotic resistance impedes the success of current antibiotic-based eradication treatments. When probiotic lactobacilli are administered along with the treatment as an adjuvant, its efficacy is substantially increased and side effects may be lessened. In addition, lactobacilli with other probiotic organisms in ripened milk and yogurt aid development of immunity in the intestine mucus in humans by raising the number of immunoglobulin A (Immunoglobulin A (+)) antibodies.
Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a common condition associated with bile acid-induced oxidative stress and accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in
Given the known microbial associations, lactobacilli are currently available as probiotics to help control urogenital and vaginal infections, such as bacterial vaginosis (BV). Lactobacilli produce to suppress the pathogenic growth of certain bacteria, as well as lactic acid, which lowers the vaginal pH to around 4.5 or less, hampering the survival of other bacteria.
In children, lactobacilli such as Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus (previously L. rhamnosus) are associated with a reduction of atopic eczema, also known as dermatitis, due to anti-inflammatory secreted by this probiotic bacteria.
Their importance in fermentation comes from both metabolism of the food itself, as well as the inhibition of growth of other potentially pathogenic microbes. The antibacterial and antifungal activity of lactobacilli relies on production of bacteriocins and low molecular weight compounds that inhibit these microorganisms.
Sourdough bread is made either spontaneously, by taking advantage of the bacteria naturally present in flour, or by using a "starter culture", which is a symbiotic culture of yeast and lactic acid bacteria growing in a water and flour Growth medium. The bacteria metabolize sugars into lactic acid, which lowers the pH of their environment and creates the signature sourness associated with yogurt, sauerkraut, etc.
In many traditional pickling processes, vegetables are submerged in brine, and salt-tolerant lactobacilli feed on natural sugars found in the vegetables. The resulting mix of salt and lactic acid is a hostile environment for other microbes, such as fungi, and the vegetables are thus preserved, remaining edible for long periods.
Lactobacilli, especially Pediococcus and L. brevis, are some of the most common beer spoilage organisms. They are, however, essential to the production of sour beers such as Belgian and American wild ales, giving the beer a distinct tart flavor.
Scientist Elie Metchnikoff won a Nobel prize in 1908 for his work on LAB, the connection to food, and possible usage as a probiotic.'Lactic Acid Bacteria and Their Uses in Animal Feeding to Improve Food Safety' in Advances in Food and Nutrition Research, Volume 50 (Elsevier),
/ref> In an experimental model of GERD, Lactobacillus species (L. acidophilus, L. plantarum, and L. fermentum) facilitated the repair of DNA damage caused by bile-induced ROS. For patients with GERD, there is significant interest in the anti-inflammatory effect of lactobacilli that may help prevent progression to Barrett’s esophagus and esophageal adenocarcinoma.
Oral health
Food production
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