The aim of this study was to demonstrate the metabolic and proteomic adaptation of Lactobacillus rhamnosus strains, which were isolated at different stages of Parmigiano Reggiano cheese ripening. Compared to de Man, Rogosa, and Sharpe (MRS) broth, cultivation under cheese-like conditions (cheese broth, CB) increased the number of free amino acids used as carbon sources. Compared with growth on MRS or pasteurized and microfiltrated milk, all strains cultivated in CB showed a low synthesis of d,l-lactic acid and elevated levels of acetic acid. The proteomic maps of the five representative strains, showing different metabolic traits, were comparatively determined after growth on MRS and CB media. The amount of intracellular and cell-associated proteins was affected by culture conditions and diversity between strains, depending on their time of isolation. Protein spots showing decreased (62 spots) or increased (59 spot) amounts during growth on CB were identified using MALDI-TOF-MS/MS or LC-nano-ESI-MS/MS. Compared with cultivation on MRS broth, the L. rhamnosus strains cultivated under cheese-like conditions had modified amounts of some proteins responsible for protein biosynthesis, nucleotide, and carbohydrate metabolisms, the glycolysis pathway, proteolytic activity, cell wall, and exopolysaccharide biosynthesis, cell regulation, amino acid, and citrate metabolism, oxidation/reduction processes, and stress responses.
Aims: Lactobacillus rhamnosus is a dominant species during Parmigiano Reggiano cheese ripening and exhibits a great adaptability to unfavourable growth conditions. Gene expression of a Lact. rhamnosus, isolated from Parmigiano Reggiano cheese, grown in a rich medium (MRS) and in a cheese‐like medium (CB) has been compared by a novel cDNA‐amplified fragment length polymorphism (cDNA‐AFLP) protocol.
Methods and Results: Two techniques, capillary and gel electrophoresis cDNA‐AFLP, were applied to generate unique transcript tags from reverse‐transcribed messenger RNA using the immobilization of biotinylated 3′‐terminal cDNA fragments on streptavidin‐coated Dynabeads. The use of three pairs of primers allowed detecting 64 genes expressed in MRS and 96 in CB. Different transcripts were observed when Lact. rhamnosus was cultured on CB and MRS.
Conclusions: The cDNA‐AFLP approach proved to be able to show that Lact. rhamnosus modifies the expression of a large part of genes when cultivated in CB compared with growth under optimal conditions (MRS). In particular, the profiles of the strain grown in CB were more complex probably because the cells activate different metabolic pathways to generate energy and to respond to the environmental changes.
Significance and Impact of Study: This is the first research on Lact. rhamnosus isolated from cheese and represents one of the few concerning bacterial transcriptomic analysis towards cDNA‐AFLP approaches.
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