Lactic acid bacteria from "terasi" shrimp paste, a highly popular fermented seafood in Indonesia were isolated and characterized. Viable cell counts were 10(4) to 10(6) cfu/g on MRS medium. All the isolates were catalase-negative, gram-positive cocci and were able to grow at 15% NaCl. Numerical phenotypic analysis showed that the isolates clustered into one group. However, they could be classified into two types: the Tetragenococcus halophilus group and the T. muriaticus group as revealed by a restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis and sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. This study is the first to show that both species of Tetragenococcus are distributed in Indonesian fermented foods.
Aims: To investigate the effects of the salt concentration, incubation temperature and initial pH of the medium on the fermentative ability of the halophilic lactic acid bacteria, Tetragenococcus muriaticus and T. halophilus. Method and Results: The growth, lactic acid production and pH reduction ability of five strains of T. muriaticus and T. halophilus in MRS broth medium under various culture conditions such as salt concentration (3, 7, 15 and 23% NaCl), temperature (20, 30 and 40°C), and initial medium pH (5AE8, 6AE5 and 7AE5) were investigated. Those of T. halophilus were seriously affected by a high salinity (23% NaCl); in contrast, those of T. muriaticus were affected by a low initial pH (5AE8).
Conclusions:The results indicate that high saline concentrations and low pH values have significant impact on the growth, lactic acid production and pH reduction ability of T. halophilus and T. muriaticus, respectively. Significance and Impact of the Study: This study appears to be important in biopreservation during the manufacture of fermented food products. Both T. muriaticus and T. halophilus may support each other in reducing pH in hypersaline or low pH environment. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the fermentation ability of T. muriaticus.
A natural antibacterial-substance-producing gram-positive bacterium was isolated from terasi shrimp paste, a popular fermented product in Indonesia. This strain, a spore-forming and strictly aerobic bacterium, was identified as Virgibacillus salexigens by 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis. The antibacterial substance purified from the precipitated product in the culture supernatant of the strain using ammonium sulfate showed a broad inhibition spectrum against gram-positive bacteria, including a typical foodborne bacterium, namely, Listeria monocytogenes. The antibacterial activity of the substance was inactivated by treatments with various proteolytic enzymes. It was stable after heating or pH treatment, and approximately 60% of the initial activity remained even after heating at 121 °C for 15 min. In addition, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS) analysis indicated that its monoisotopic mass weight was 5318.4 Da (M+H)(+). On the basis of the results obtained by the automated Edman degradation technique and MALDI-TOF MS analysis, the substance can be classified as a member of Class IId bacteriocins, but it could not be identified as any of the previously purified substances except for the putative bacteriocin predicted from the draft genome sequence data of gram-positive bacteria such as Virgibacillus and Bacillus strains.
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