Helicobacter pylori may cause stomach diseases such as chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer, and gastric cancer, and several studies reported that lactobacilli have inhibitory effects on H. pylori. In this study, 38 Lactobacillus strains were screened for anti-H. pylori activity using in vitro methods, including survivability under the simulated gastric conditions, agar plate diffusion, urease activity, coaggregation, autoaggregation, and hydrocarbon analysis. The results indicate that 2 Lactobacillus strains showed potential anti-H. pylori activity in vitro. Lactobacillus plantarum 18 had the largest zone of inhibition and markedly reduced the urease activity of H. pylori. Lactobacillus gasseri Chen had higher coaggregation rate (58.15%) and hydrophobicity (59.27%) compared with the other strains. Further research is needed to verify the activities of these strains against H. pylori.
beta-Galactosidase catalyzes the hydrolysis of beta-galactosides into monosaccharides and is widely used in dairy processing. This study reports the extracellular secretion of a cytoplasmic thermostable beta-galactosidase from Geobacillus stearothermophilus IAM11001 in Bacillus subtilis. This enzyme has potential applications in the dairy industry. It was not secreted in B. subtilis by mediation of 3 general secretory signal peptides, but was secreted extracellularly when it was fused to a twin-arginine signal peptide of B. subtilis phosphodiesterase. Defined and rich culture media were used for recombinant enzyme production, and the extracellular target enzymatic activity reached about 44% of the total enzymatic activity synthesized at 18 h of cultivation in Luria-Bertani medium. As a control of secretion, when the signal peptide coding sequence was absent from the N terminus of the target gene bgaB, the extracellular target enzymatic activity obtained under the same condition of cultivation accounted for less than 7% of the total enzymatic activity synthesized. Results also showed that coexpression of the B. subtilis proteins TatAd and TatCd was indispensable for the secretion of the target enzyme.
The rise in incidence in allergies may correlate with the widespread and liberal use of antibiotics. This study affirmed that one species of LAB ST218 significantly reduces allergic airway inflammation in antibiotic-treated mice model.
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