info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Thiamine-producing lactic acid bacteria and their potential use in the prevention of neurodegenerative diseases
Fecha
2021-02-06Registro en:
Terán, María del Milagro; de Moreno, Maria Alejandra; Savoy, Graciela; Leblanc, Jean Guy Joseph; Thiamine-producing lactic acid bacteria and their potential use in the prevention of neurodegenerative diseases; Springer; Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology; 105; 5; 6-2-2021; 2097-2107
0175-7598
1432-0614
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Terán, María del Milagro
de Moreno, Maria Alejandra
Savoy, Graciela
Leblanc, Jean Guy Joseph
Resumen
Thiamine or vitamin B1, an essential micronutrient mainly involved in energy production, has a beneficial impact on the nervous system, and its deficiency can be associated with the development and progression of neurodegenerative diseases. The aim of this work was to select thiamine-producing lactic acid bacteria (LAB) and study their physiological effects using neuron cell cultures. In this study, 23 LAB able to produce thiamine were identified by growth in thiamine-free synthetic medium. Intra- and extracellular thiamine concentrations were determined using a microbiological method and results confirmed by HPLC techniques. A wide variation in vitamin production was found showing that this property was not only species specific but also a strain-dependent trait. Five of these strains were pre-selected for their capacity to produce higher concentrations of thiamine. Only the pre-treatment with the intracellular extract of Lactiplantibacillus (L.) plantarum CRL 1905 increased significantly neuronal survival in N2a cells’ model of neurotoxicity (MPP+ ) with thiamine deficiency conditions (amprolium). Furthermore, amprolium-resistant variants of CRL 1905 were isolated by exposition of the strain to increasing concentrations of this toxic thiamine analogue. The variant A9 was able to increase more than 2 times the intracellular thiamine production of the original strain. A9 bacterial extract significantly prevented neuronal cell death and the increase of IL-6. The amprolium-resistant strain A9 showed a modulating and neuroprotective effect in an in vitro model of neurotoxicity constituting a potential bio-strategy to counteract thiamine deficiencies and thus prevent or treat neurodegenerative diseases.