Lactobacilus plantarum A6, isolated from fermented cassava, can break down cassava raw starch that has not been subjected to preliminary physicochemical treatment. When the pH was kept at 6, the microorganism cultured in a bioreactor excreted a high a-amylase activity (60 U/ml). Synthesis of the enzyme occurred during the stationary phase and resulted in full hydrolysis of the cassava starch granules. This gave 41 g of lactic acid from 45 g of raw starch after 3 days of fermentation. Enzymatic attack was evident under scanning electron microscopy in the rougher appearance of the surface of starch granules and in the presence of large cavities in some of them. In contrast, when the pH was not regulated, only a small amount of a-amylase activity was produced (2 U/ml) and no decrease in the starch content of the medium was observed. However, under scanning electron microscopy, some granules displayed a rougher surface, which might have been the result of weak enzymatic attack
E . G IR A UD , A . CH AM P AI LL E R, S. M OU LA R D A ND M . R AI M BA UL T . 1998. A miniaturized most probable number (MPN) method for the selective enumeration of three bacteria species (Lactobacillus plantarum A6, Leuconostoc mesenteroides and Lactococcus lactis) is described. This selective count method, based on specific consumption of carbon substrate and resistance to antibiotics, was used for the quantitative assessment of the three bacteria during mixed cultures in a model cassava fermentation. A typical microbial succession pattern was observed: (i) Lactococcus lactis and Leuc. mesenteroides dominated during the first hours of fermentation as their growth was very rapid ; (ii) from hour 12, Lactobacillus plantarum replaced the two latter strains and Lactococcus lactis disappeared gradually, followed by Leuc. mesenteroides. The growth rates of each strain appeared to be independent of the others, while acidification rates increased strongly in mixed cultures compared with pure cultures. No positive interactions resulting from the amylolytic character of Lactobacillus plantarum A6, and no negative interactions resulting from the Nis ¦ property of Lactococcus lactis, were revealed between the three strains under the model conditions used.
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