Lactose utilization is the primary function of lactic acid bacteria used in industrial dairy fermentations. The mechanism by which lactose is transported determines largely the pathway for the hydrolysis of the internalized disaccharide and the fate of the glucose and galactose moieties. Biochemical and genetic studies have indicated that lactose can be transported via phosphotransferase systems, transport systems dependent on ATP binding cassette proteins, or secondary transport systems including proton symport and lactose-galactose antiport systems. The genetic determinants for the group translocation and secondary transport systems have been identified in lactic acid bacteria and are reviewed here. In many cases the lactose genes are organized into operons or operon-like structures with a modular organization, in which the genes encoding lactose transport are tightly linked to those for lactose hydrolysis. In addition, in some cases the genes involved in the galactose metabolism are linked to or co-transcribed with the lactose genes, suggesting a common evolutionary pathway. The lactose genes show characteristic configurations and very high sequence identity in some phylogenetically distant lactic acid bacteria such as Leuconostoc and Lactobacillus or Lactococcus and Lactobacillus. The significance of these results for the adaptation of lactic acid bacteria to the industrial milk environment in which lactose is the sole energy source is discussed.
While lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria have been scientifically important for over a century, many of these are marketed today as probiotics and have become a valuable and rapidly expanding sector of the food market that is leading functional foods in many countries. The human gastro-intestinal tract with its various compartments and complex microbiota is the primary target of most of these functional foods containing lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria (LAB&B). In addition, their use as vectors for delivery of molecules with therapeutic value to the host via the intestinal tract is being studied. This review focuses on molecular approaches for the investigation of the diversity of lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria in the human intestine, as well as tracking of probiotic bacteria within this complex ecosystem. Moreover, methodologies to determine the viability of the lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria and molecular approaches to study the mechanisms by which they adapt, establish and interact with the human host via the digestive tract, are described.
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