Some strains of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) produce riboflavin, a water-soluble vitamin of the B complex, essential for human beings. Here, we have evaluated riboflavin (B2 vitamin) production by five Lactobacillus plantarum strains isolated from chicha , a traditional maize-based fermented alcoholic beverage from north-western Argentina and their isogenic riboflavin-overproducing derivatives previously selected using roseoflavin. A direct fluorescence spectroscopic detection method to quantify riboflavin production in bacterial culture supernatants has been tested. Comparison of the efficiency for riboflavin fluorescence quantification with and without prior HPLC fractionation showed that the developed method is a rapid and easy test for selection of B2 vitamin-producing strains. In addition, it can be used for quantitative detection of the vitamin production in real time during bacterial growth. On the basis of this and previous analyses, the L. plantarum M5MA1-B2 riboflavin overproducer was selected for in vitro and in vivo studies after being fluorescently labeled by transfer of the pRCR12 plasmid, which encodes the mCherry protein. The labeling did not affect negatively the growth, the riboflavin production nor the adhesion of the strain to Caco-2 cells. Thus, L. plantarum M5MA1-B2[pRCR12] was evaluated for its survival under digestive tract stresses in the presence of microbiota in the dynamic multistage BFBL gut model and in a murine model. After exposure to both models, M5MA1-B2[pRCR12] could be recovered and detected by the pink color of the colonies. The results indicated a satisfactory resistance of the strain to gastric and intestinal stress conditions but a low colonization capability observed both in vitro and in vivo . Overall, L. plantarum M5MA1-B2 could be proposed as a probiotic strain for the development of functional foods.
The activity of neuron populations gives rise to field potentials (FPs) that extend beyond the sources. Their mixing in the volume dilutes the original temporal motifs in a site-dependent manner, a fact that has received little attention. And yet, it potentially rids of physiological significance the time-frequency parameters of individual waves (amplitude, phase, duration). This is most likely to happen when a single source or a local origin is erroneously assumed. Recent studies using spatial treatment of these signals and anatomically realistic modeling of neuron aggregates provide convincing evidence for the multisource origin and site-dependent blend of FPs. Thus, FPs generated in primary structures like the neocortex and hippocampus reach far and cross-contaminate each other but also, they add and even impose their temporal traits on distant regions. Furthermore, both structures house neurons that act as spatially distinct (but overlapped) FP sources whose activation is state, region, and time dependent, making the composition of so-called local FPs highly volatile and strongly site dependent. Since the spatial reach cannot be predicted without source geometry, it is important to assess whether waveforms and temporal motifs arise from a single source; otherwise, those from each of the co-active sources should be sought.
The role of interhemispheric connections along successive segments of cortico-hippocampal circuits is poorly understood. We aimed to obtain a global picture of spontaneous transfer of activity during non-theta states across several nodes of the bilateral circuit in anesthetized rats. Spatial discrimination techniques applied to bilateral laminar field potentials (FP) across the CA1/Dentate Gyrus provided simultaneous left and right readouts in five FP generators that reflect activity in specific hippocampal afferents and associative pathways. We used a battery of correlation and coherence analyses to extract complementary aspects at different time scales and frequency bands. FP generators exhibited varying bilateral correlation that was high in CA1 and low in the Dentate Gyrus. The submillisecond delays indicate coordination but not support for synaptic dependence of one side on another. The time and frequency characteristics of bilateral coupling were specific to each generator. The Schaffer generator was strongly bilaterally coherent for both sharp waves and gamma waves, although the latter maintained poor amplitude co-variation. The lacunosum-moleculare generator was composed of up to three spatially overlapping activities, and globally maintained high bilateral coherence for long but not short (gamma) waves. These two CA1 generators showed no ipsilateral relationship in any frequency band. In the Dentate Gyrus, strong bilateral coherence was observed only for input from the medial entorhinal areas, while those from the lateral entorhinal areas were largely asymmetric, for both alpha and gamma waves. Granger causality testing showed strong bidirectional relationships between all homonymous bilateral generators except the lateral entorhinal input and a local generator in the Dentate Gyrus. It also revealed few significant relationships between ipsilateral generators, most notably the anticipation of lateral entorhinal cortex toward all others. Thus, with the notable exception of the lateral entorhinal areas, there is a marked interhemispheric coherence primarily for slow envelopes of activity, but not for pulse-like gamma waves, except in the Schafer segment. The results are consistent with essentially different streams of activity entering from and returning to the cortex on each side, with slow waves reflecting times of increased activity exchange between hemispheres and fast waves generally reflecting ipsilateral processing.
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