Artículos de revistas
Supplementation with fruit and okara soybean by-products and amaranth flour increases the folate production by starter and probiotic cultures
Fecha
2016-07-11Registro en:
Albuquerque Cavalcanti de Albuquerque, Marcela; Bedani, Raquel; Silva Vieira, Antônio Diogo; Leblanc, Jean Guy Joseph; Isay Saad, Susana Marta; Supplementation with fruit and okara soybean by-products and amaranth flour increases the folate production by starter and probiotic cultures; Elsevier Science; International Journal of Food Microbiology; 236; 11-7-2016; 26-32
0168-1605
1879-3460
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Albuquerque Cavalcanti de Albuquerque, Marcela
Bedani, Raquel
Silva Vieira, Antônio Diogo
Leblanc, Jean Guy Joseph
Isay Saad, Susana Marta
Resumen
The ability of two starter cultures (Streptococcus (S.) thermophilus ST-M6 and St. thermophilus TA-40) and eleven probiotic cultures (St. thermophilus TH-4, Lactobacillus (Lb.) acidophilus LA-5, Lb. fermentum PCC, Lb. reuteri RC-14, Lb. paracasei subsp. paracasei Lb. casei 431, Lb. paracasei subsp. paracasei F19, Lb. rhamnosus GR-1, and Lb. rhamnosus LGG, Bifidobacterium (B.) animalis subsp. lactis BB-12, B. longum subsp. longum BB-46, and B. longum subsp. infantis BB-02) to produce folate in a modified MRS broth (mMRS) supplemented with different fruit (passion fruit, acerola, orange, and mango) and okara soybean by-products and amaranth flour was investigated. Initially, the folate content of each vegetable substrate was determined: passion fruit by-product showed the lowest folate content (8±2 ng/mL) and okara the highest (457±22 ng/mL). When the orange by-product and amaranth flour were added to mMRS, all strains were able to increase folate production after 24 h of fermentation. B. longum subsp infantis BB-02 produced the highest concentrations (1223 ± 116 ng/mL) in amaranth flour. Okara was the substrate that had the lowest impact on the folate production by all strains evaluated. Lb. acidophilus LA-5 (297 ± 36 ng/mL) and B. animalis subsp. lactis BB-12 (237 ± 23 ng/mL) were also able to produce folate after growth in mMRS containing acerola and orange by-products, respectively. The results of this study demonstrate that folate production is not only strain-dependent but also influenced by the addition of different substrates in the growth media.