Abstract

BackgroundProbiotic bacteria can provide health benefits when delivered in functional foods. This study involved isolation of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) from traditionally dried and salted anchovy fish and characterization of their survival in simulated gastrointestinal digestion. Promising strains were used to prepare fermented fish sausages which were then evaluated for cytotoxicity activity against two cancer cell-lines, antidiabetic activity as determined by α-amylase and α-glucosidase inhibition, and antioxidant and proteolytic activities in vitro, as compared to non-fermented control sausages.ResultsOut of 85 LAB obtained, 13 isolates with high tolerance to simulated gastrointestinal digestion were obtained, which were identified as Enterococcus spp. Four E. faecium strains, one E. faecalis, and one E. durans were used separately to make fermented fish sausages. The α-amylase and α-glucosidase inhibition from fish sausages fermented by Enterococcus spp. ranged from 29.2 to 68.7% and 23.9 to 41.4%, respectively, during 21 days of storage. The cytotoxicity activities against Caco2 and MCF-7 cells of fish sausages fermented with Enterococcus spp. ranged from 18.0 to 24% and 13.9 to 27.9%, respectively. Cytotoxicity activities correlated positively with proteolysis and antioxidant activities, α-amylase and α-glucosidase inhibition activities, but negatively with the pH in fermented fish sausages. Strains also exhibited antimicrobial activity against foodborne pathogens and presented no significant concerns with regards to antibiotic resistance or virulence gene content.ConclusionsFish sausages fermented by potential probiotic isolates of Enterococcus spp. from dried fish had valuable health-promoting benefits compared with non-fermented control sausages.

Highlights

  • Probiotic bacteria can provide health benefits when delivered in functional foods

  • Commercially available probiotic bacteria are from the Lactobacillus

  • General characterization of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) isolates One hundred and fifty colonies, with different morphological properties, isolated on MRS agar from traditional fish products sold in fish markets were Gram-stained and tested for catalase

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Summary

Introduction

Probiotic bacteria can provide health benefits when delivered in functional foods. It is desirable for probiotic strains to possess several properties, such as a tolerance to gastrointestinal conditions (gastric, intestinal, and bile acids), AlKalbani et al Microb Cell Fact (2019) 18:188 attachment to epithelial cells, assimilation of cholesterol in food and the human intestine, bile salt hydrolysis, safety (no virulence genes, absence of hemolytic activity, and sensitive to antibiotics), antimicrobial properties, and survival during the fermentation process and storage [3, 4]. Probiotic strains may be used to produce fermented functional foods [7]. Functional foods produced using probiotics possess superior health advantages compared with conventional food products [8]. Attempts to screen for new LAB bacteria that possess excellent probiotic characteristics from various food sources is ongoing [9,10,11]

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