| Literature DB >> 33668910 |
Penka Petrova1, Ivan Ivanov1, Lidia Tsigoriyna2, Nadezhda Valcheva2, Evgenia Vasileva2, Tsvetomila Parvanova-Mancheva2, Alexander Arsov1, Kaloyan Petrov2.
Abstract
The reported health effects of fermented dairy foods, which are traditionally manufactured in Bulgaria, are connected with their microbial biodiversity. The screening and development of probiotic starters for dairy products with unique properties are based exclusively on the isolation and characterization of lactic acid bacterial (LAB) strains. This study aims to systematically describe the LAB microbial content of artisanal products such as Bulgarian-type yoghurt, white brined cheese, kashkaval, koumiss, kefir, katak, and the Rhodope's brano mliako. The original technologies for their preparation preserve the valuable microbial content and improve their nutritional and probiotic qualities. This review emphasises the features of LAB starters and the autochthonous microflora, the biochemistry of dairy food production, and the approaches for achieving the fortification of the foods with prebiotics, bioactive peptides (ACE2-inhibitors, bacteriocins, cyclic peptides with antimicrobial activity), immunomodulatory exopolysaccharides, and other metabolites (indol-3-propionic acid, free amino acids, antioxidants, prebiotics) with reported beneficial effects on human health. The link between the microbial content of dairy foods and the healthy human microbiome is highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: LAB; bioactive peptides; kashkaval; katak; kefir; koumiss; probiotics; white brined cheese; yoghurt
Year: 2021 PMID: 33668910 PMCID: PMC7996614 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9030480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607