Lactobacillus, Beijerinck, 1901
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.1099/ijsem.0.004107 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4728260 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A8D903-D204-024A-FFD0-FBFE55AA314A |
treatment provided by |
Valdenar (2021-04-29 20:05:09, last updated by Guilherme 2025-02-06 14:43:30) |
scientific name |
Lactobacillus |
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Emended descriptionof Lactobacillus View in CoL
Lactobacillus species are Gram-positive, homofermentative, thermophilic and non-spore-forming rods. Most Lactobacillus species do not ferment pentoses and none of the organisms encode genes for the pentose–phosphate pathway or pyruvate formate lyase. The emended description of the genus includes all organisms that were previously assigned to the L. delbrueckii group [ 17]. Lactobacillus species are host-adapted; the Lactobacillus melliventris clade (previously termed the Firm-5 clade) is adapted to social bees [ 52] while all other Lactobacillus speciesare adapted tovertebrate hosts. Lactobacillus species ferment a relatively broad spectrum of carbohydrates and have the strain-specific ability to ferment extracellular fructans, starch, or glycogen [ 53, 54]. The L. melliventris cladespecies also ferment awider range of carbohydrates when compared to insect-adapted species in the genera Apilactobacillus and Bombilactobacillus . In intestinal habitats, Lactobacillus species are generally associated with heterofermentative lactobacilli. For specific examples, it was shown that co-habitation of Lactobacillus species with heterofermentative lactobacilli is based on long-term evolutionary relationships in biofilms [ 55] and a complementary preference for carbon sources [ 18, 56]. Many Lactobacillus species are able to ferment mannitol, which also reflects co-habitation with heterofermenters. The metabolic focus of L. delbrueckii on lactose [ 57] explains its dominance in yoghurt and cheese fermentations but also relates to its presence in the intestine of suckling piglets [ 54]. The genus Lactobacillus remains a relatively heterogenous genus with L. iners as the mostdistant member. L. iners has the smallest genome size among all Lactobacillaceae , which reflects its strict adaptation to the human vagina.
In addition to their relevance inintestinal andvaginal ecosystems, Lactobacillus species frequently occur in dairy and cereal fermentations and are widely used as starter cultures for production of fermented dairy products [ 58, 59].
Aphylogenetic treeof all species in the genus Lactobacillus is provided in Fig. S6A View Fig .
The type species of the genus Lactobacillus is L. delbrueckii . Although the nomenclature of species in the emended genus Lactobacillus remains unchanged, a listof species and a listof their properties is provided below.
17. Duar RM, Lin XB, Zheng J, Martino ME, Grenier T et al. Lifestyles in transition: evolution and natural history of the genus Lactobacillus. FEMS Microbiol Rev 2017; 41: S 27 - S 48.
18. Ganzle MG. Lactic metabolism revisited: metabolism of lactic acid bacteria in food fermentations and food spoilage. Curr Opin Food Sci 2015; 2: 106 - 117.
58. Ganzle MG. Fermented Foods. In: Doyle MP, Diez Gonzalez F, Hill C (editors). Food Microbiol. Fundam. Front, 5 th ed. ASM Press; 2019. pp. 855 - 900.
59. Hutkins RW. Microbiology and technology of fermented foods, 2 nd. Chigaco, IL: IFT Press; 2019.
55. Lin XB, Wang T, Stothard P, Corander J, Wang J et al. The evolution of ecological facilitation within mixed-species biofilms in the mouse gastrointestinal tract. ISME J 2018; 12: 2770 - 2784.
52. Martinson VG, Danforth BN, Minckley RL, Rueppell O, Tingek S et al. A simple and distinctive microbiota associated with honey bees and bumble bees. Mol Ecol 2011; 20: 619 - 628.
56. Tannock GW, Wilson CM, Loach D, Cook GM, Eason J et al. Resource partitioning in relation to cohabitation of Lactobacillus species in the mouse forestomach. ISME J 2012; 6: 927 - 938.
57. van de Guchte M, Penaud S, Grimaldi C, Barbe V, Bryson K et al. The complete genome sequence of Lactobacillus bulgaricus reveals extensive and ongoing reductive evolution. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 2006; 103: 9274 - 9279.
53. van der Veer C, Hertzberger RY, Bruisten SM, Tytgat HLP, Swanenburg J et al. Comparative genomics of human Lactobacillus crispatus isolates reveals genes for glycosylation and glycogen degradation: implications for in vivo dominance of the vaginal microbiota. Microbiome 2019; 7: 49.
54. Wang W, Hu H, Zijlstra RT, Zheng J, Ganzle MG. Metagenomic reconstructions of gut microbial metabolism in weanling pigs. Microbiome 2019; 7: 48.
Fig. 6. Gene family presence/absence patterns in Lactobacillaceae and Leuconostocaceae. Each column represents a gene family presence/absence pattern in species of Lactobacillaceae and Leuconostoaceae, where presence is indicated with a dot. The absolute number of gene families that conform to each pattern is visualized in the marginal bar plot at the top. Separations between phylogroups are indicated with horizontal black lines. We defined genes that were present in all genomes of a clade and in none of the genomes outside of that clade as ‘signature genes’ (dark blue); other genes are shown in light blue. Only presence/absence patterns followed by four or more gene families are shown. Patterns of presence in a single species or all species are not shown. Unassigned species are clusters of closely related genomes which could not be assigned to a known species due to low whole-genome similarity to a type strain and/or low 16S rRNA similarity to a type strain.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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