Abstract
The continuing expansion of interest in probiotic bacteria has led to an increase in manufactured Functional Foods and medicines containing these bacteria. Given the intestinal origin of these microorganisms, the challenges these sensitive bacteria face in order to be in a highly viable state throughout processing, storage and gastrointestinal transit to the site of action in the human gut are enormous. These bacteria encounter stresses including temperature, acid, bile, exposure and osmotic and oxidative stress in both product matrices and during gastrointestinal transit. However, like all bacteria, probiotic bacteria retain a broad arsenal of molecular mechanisms to combat the often lethal environmental stresses encountered during processing and following ingestion. A comprehensive appreciation of these mechanisms should inevitably lead to the design and manufacture of probiotic cultures, which retain greater viability through to the target site in the intestine. This review attempts to catalogue the cellular processes available to probiotic bacteria to facilitate survival in stressful conditions, and to speculate on how manipulation of these cellular systems can lead to production of designer strains with enhanced viability in food systems and efficacy following ingestion.
Keywords: Probiotic, lactobacilli, heat shock protein, stress, viability
Current Pharmaceutical Design
Title: Life Under Stress: The Probiotic Stress Response and How it may be Manipulated
Volume: 14 Issue: 14
Author(s): B. M. Corcoran, C. Stanton, G. Fitzgerald and R. P. Ross
Affiliation:
Keywords: Probiotic, lactobacilli, heat shock protein, stress, viability
Abstract: The continuing expansion of interest in probiotic bacteria has led to an increase in manufactured Functional Foods and medicines containing these bacteria. Given the intestinal origin of these microorganisms, the challenges these sensitive bacteria face in order to be in a highly viable state throughout processing, storage and gastrointestinal transit to the site of action in the human gut are enormous. These bacteria encounter stresses including temperature, acid, bile, exposure and osmotic and oxidative stress in both product matrices and during gastrointestinal transit. However, like all bacteria, probiotic bacteria retain a broad arsenal of molecular mechanisms to combat the often lethal environmental stresses encountered during processing and following ingestion. A comprehensive appreciation of these mechanisms should inevitably lead to the design and manufacture of probiotic cultures, which retain greater viability through to the target site in the intestine. This review attempts to catalogue the cellular processes available to probiotic bacteria to facilitate survival in stressful conditions, and to speculate on how manipulation of these cellular systems can lead to production of designer strains with enhanced viability in food systems and efficacy following ingestion.
Export Options
About this article
Cite this article as:
Corcoran M. B., Stanton C., Fitzgerald G. and Ross P. R., Life Under Stress: The Probiotic Stress Response and How it may be Manipulated, Current Pharmaceutical Design 2008; 14 (14) . https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161208784480225
DOI https://dx.doi.org/10.2174/138161208784480225 |
Print ISSN 1381-6128 |
Publisher Name Bentham Science Publisher |
Online ISSN 1873-4286 |
- Author Guidelines
- Graphical Abstracts
- Fabricating and Stating False Information
- Research Misconduct
- Post Publication Discussions and Corrections
- Publishing Ethics and Rectitude
- Increase Visibility of Your Article
- Archiving Policies
- Peer Review Workflow
- Order Your Article Before Print
- Promote Your Article
- Manuscript Transfer Facility
- Editorial Policies
- Allegations from Whistleblowers
- Announcements
Related Articles
-
Hepatitis C Viruss Immune Evasion Strategies
Current Immunology Reviews (Discontinued) An Insight into the Current Perspective and Potential Drug Targets for Visceral Leishmaniasis (VL)
Current Drug Targets Brain Tumor Detection Using Machine Learning and Deep Learning: A Review
Current Medical Imaging MALDI-ToF Mass Spectra Phenomic Analysis for Human Disease Diagnosis Enabled by Cutting-Edge Data Processing Pipelines and Bioinformatics Tools
Current Medicinal Chemistry The Crosstalk between Tissue Engineering and Pharmaceutical Biotechnology: Recent Advances and Future Directions
Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology Natural Naphthoquinones with Great Importance in Medicinal Chemistry
Current Organic Synthesis Aptamer-based Homogeneous Analysis for Food Control
Current Analytical Chemistry Microspheres and Microcapsules for Protein Delivery: Strategies of Drug Activity Retention
Current Pharmaceutical Design Gold Nanoparticles as Carrier(s) for Drug Targeting and Imaging
Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology Designing and In-Vitro Characterization of Micelle Forming Amphiphilic PEGylated Rapamycin Nanocarriers for the Treatment of Gastric Cancer
Current Drug Delivery The Disposal of Reactive Carbonyl Species through Carnosine Conjugation: What We Know Now
Current Medicinal Chemistry Metabotyping of a Protected Non-Model Organism, Green Sea Turtle (Chelonia mydas), using <sup>1</sup>H NMR Spectroscopy and Optimized Plasma Methods for Metabolomics
Current Metabolomics Assessment of Antioxidant Capacity of Natural Products
Current Pharmaceutical Biotechnology New Synthesis of Isoindolo[2,1–b]isoquinolines. Preparation and Aqueous Bioavailability of its Silica Nanoparticles Hybrid System
Current Organic Chemistry Modulation of pRb/E2F Functions in the Regulation of Cell Cycle and in Cancer
Current Cancer Drug Targets Metabolomics as a Tool for Drug Discovery and Personalised Medicine. A Review
Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry Application of Novel Nanotechnology Strategies in Plant Biotransformation: A Contemporary Overview
Recent Patents on Biotechnology Synthesis of Medicinally Privileged Heterocycles through Dielectric Heating
Current Medicinal Chemistry The Next Step in Voice Assessment: High-Speed Digital Endoscopy and Objective Evaluation
Current Bioinformatics On Various Metrics Used for Validation of Predictive QSAR Models with Applications in Virtual Screening and Focused Library Design
Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening