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Probiotic Properties of Lactobacillus Plantarum LRCC5193, a Plant-Origin Lactic Acid Bacterium Isolated from Kimchi and Its Use in Chocolates

Authors
Lim, Jung-hoonYoon, Seok-minTan, Pei-LeiYang, SiyoungKim, Sae-hunPark, Hyun-jin
Issue Date
Nov-2018
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
artificial digestive juice; chocolate; Lactobacillus plantarum; probiotics; probiotics stability
Citation
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, v.83, no.11, pp.2802 - 2811
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE
Volume
83
Number
11
Start Page
2802
End Page
2811
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/71925
DOI
10.1111/1750-3841.14364
ISSN
0022-1147
Abstract
This study involves an investigation of the probiotic properties of lactic acid bacteria isolated from Kimchi, and their potential applications in chocolate. Lactobacillus plantarum-LRCC5193 (LP-LRCC5193) demonstrated a significantly higher degree of heat, acid, and bile acid tolerance compared to other Kimchi isolates. The intestinal adhesion assay also revealed that 84.2 log percentage of LP-LRCC5193 adhered to the Caco-2 cells after 2 h of incubation. Furthermore, the lyophilized LP-LRCC5193 maintained 92.9 log percentage and 97.2 log percentage survival rate within artificial stomach juice (pH 2.5, pepsin 0.04%) and artificial intestinal juice (oxgall 0.5%, trypsin 0.04%, and pancreatin 0.04%), respectively. Meanwhile, we also found that lyophilized LP-LRCC5193 incorporated in chocolate exhibited significantly higher survivability than lyophilized LP-LRCC5193 in both artificial gastric and intestinal juice under 1 to 3 hr incubation, where the survivability was within the range of 96.3 to 98.5 log percentage, and 98.8 to 98.9 log percentage, respectively. A 6-month storage test further revealed that LP-LRCC5193 demonstrated higher stability than the lyophilized LP-LRCC5103 in 3 different temperature ranges, where the final survival rates were 97.2 log percentage (20 degrees C), 89.2 log percentage (33 degrees C), and 94.4 log percentage (15 to 30 degrees C/wk). Altogether, our data suggest that chocolate can be used as a tasty delivery vehicle for delivering putative probiotic strain, LP-LRCC5193 to the gastrointestinal tract.
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