Exopolysaccharide produced by Lactiplantibacillus plantarum RO30 isolated from Romi cheese: characterization, antioxidant and burn healing activity
shaimaa K.amer; Eman A. Elmansy; Ebtsam M. Elkady; Mohsen S. Asker; Amr M. Abdou; Nagwa A. Abdallah;
Abstract
Microbial exopolysaccharides (EPSs) extracted from lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are generally recognized as safe. They
have earned popularity in recent years because of their exceptional biological features. Therefore, the present study main
focus was to study EPS-production from probiotic LAB and to investigate their antioxidant and burn wound healing efficacy.
Seventeen LAB were isolated from different food samples. All of them showed EPS-producing abilities ranging from
1.75 ± 0.05 to 4.32 ± 0.12 g/l. RO30 isolate (from Romi cheese) was chosen, due to its ability to produce the highest EPS
yield (4.23 ± 0.12 g/l). The 16S rDNA sequencing showed it belonged to the Lactiplantibacillus plantarum group and was
further identified as L. plantarum RO30 with accession number OL757866. It displayed well in vitro probiotic properties.
REPS was extracted and characterized. The existence of COO−,
OH and amide groups corresponding to typical EPSs was
confirmed via FTIR. It was constituted of glucuronic acid, mannose, glucose, and arabinose in a molar ratio of 2.2:0.1:0.5:0.1,
respectively. The average molecular weight was 4.96 × 104
g/mol. In vitro antioxidant assays showed that the REPS possesses
a DPPH radical scavenging ability of 43.60% at 5 mg/ml, reducing power of 1.108 at 10 mg/ml, and iron chelation
activity of 72.49% and 89.78% at 5 mg/ml and 10 mg/ml, respectively. The healing efficacy of REPS on burn wound models
in albino Wistar rats showed that REPS at 0.5% (w/w) concentration stimulated the process of healing in burn areas. The
results suggested that REPS might be useful as a burn wound healing agent.
have earned popularity in recent years because of their exceptional biological features. Therefore, the present study main
focus was to study EPS-production from probiotic LAB and to investigate their antioxidant and burn wound healing efficacy.
Seventeen LAB were isolated from different food samples. All of them showed EPS-producing abilities ranging from
1.75 ± 0.05 to 4.32 ± 0.12 g/l. RO30 isolate (from Romi cheese) was chosen, due to its ability to produce the highest EPS
yield (4.23 ± 0.12 g/l). The 16S rDNA sequencing showed it belonged to the Lactiplantibacillus plantarum group and was
further identified as L. plantarum RO30 with accession number OL757866. It displayed well in vitro probiotic properties.
REPS was extracted and characterized. The existence of COO−,
OH and amide groups corresponding to typical EPSs was
confirmed via FTIR. It was constituted of glucuronic acid, mannose, glucose, and arabinose in a molar ratio of 2.2:0.1:0.5:0.1,
respectively. The average molecular weight was 4.96 × 104
g/mol. In vitro antioxidant assays showed that the REPS possesses
a DPPH radical scavenging ability of 43.60% at 5 mg/ml, reducing power of 1.108 at 10 mg/ml, and iron chelation
activity of 72.49% and 89.78% at 5 mg/ml and 10 mg/ml, respectively. The healing efficacy of REPS on burn wound models
in albino Wistar rats showed that REPS at 0.5% (w/w) concentration stimulated the process of healing in burn areas. The
results suggested that REPS might be useful as a burn wound healing agent.
Other data
| Title | Exopolysaccharide produced by Lactiplantibacillus plantarum RO30 isolated from Romi cheese: characterization, antioxidant and burn healing activity | Authors | shaimaa K.amer ; Eman A. Elmansy; Ebtsam M. Elkady; Mohsen S. Asker; Amr M. Abdou; Nagwa A. Abdallah | Keywords | Antibiotics;Antimicrobial activity;Exopolysaccharide;Lactic acid bacteria;Probiotic | Issue Date | 10-Oct-2022 | Publisher | springer | Journal | World journal of microbiology & biotechnology | Volume | 38 | Start page | 245 | DOI | https://doi.org/10.1007/s11274-022-03439-6 |
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