Abstract

As a natural food additive, exopolysaccharide (EPS) produced by Streptococcus thermophilus can improve product viscosity and texture. The protein EpsA is a putative pathway-specific transcriptional regulator for EPS biosynthesis in S.thermophilus. According to comparative analysis of EPS biosynthetic gene clusters, a conserved region of epsA (609 bp) was employed to design primer pair epsA-F/R as a molecular marker for the isolation of EPS-producing (EPS+ ) S. thermophilus. Two EPS+ S. thermophiles strains, AR333 and S-3, were band-positive, whereas Lactococcus lactis NZ9000 (non-EPS-producing, EPS- ), Lactobacillus casei LC2W (EPS+ ) and L. plantarum AR113 (EPS+ ) were negative by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplicon bands using the epsA probe. This indicated good specificity of the epsA probe to EPS+ S. thermophilus. Moreover, based on PCR screening with the epsA probe, 23 positive strains were isolated and identified as S. thermophilus from our microbial library and natural fermented milk with 141.3-309.2mg L-1 of EPS production, demonstrating the validity of our molecular marker screening method. The designed molecular marker of epsA can rapidly screen EPS+ S. thermophilus, which has potential application in the dairy and other food industries. © 2021 Society of Chemical Industry.

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