A bacteriocin-producing lactic acid bacterium (strain 2.5) isolated from cow's milk used in cheese production from Northern Morocco was selected for its strong anti-listerial activity. The producer strain was identified as Enterococcus faecalis by molecular methods. Strain 2.5 carried the genetic determinants for the two-peptide enterococcal bacteriocin enterocin 1071, and the active bacteriocin was purified to homogeneity by reversed-phase chromatography from culture broths of the producer strain. Strain 2.5 carried two plasmids (of *7 and 40 kb). Characterization of strain 2.5 at biosafety level indicated that this strain is non-haemolytic, and lacks the genetic determinants for most of the virulence factors described in enterococci (cylB, cylM, gelE, ace and agg) although it carried the genetic determinants cylA, efaAfs as well as determinants for the sex pheromone peptides cpd, cob, and ccf. Strain 2.5 was resistant to tetracycline, rifampicin, and ciprofloxacin, but it was sensitive to penicillin, ampicillin, vancomycin, and teicoplanin. Results from the present study support the potential role of strain 2.5 as an antilisterial agent to be tested in traditional fermented foods.
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