Applied Microbiology (Jul 2024)

Metatranscriptomic Analysis of Argentinian Kefirs Varying in Apparent Viscosity

  • Diego Lisboa Rios,
  • Ana Agustina Bengoa,
  • Patrícia Costa Lima da Silva,
  • César Silva Santana Moura,
  • Graciela Liliana Garrote,
  • Analía Graciela Abraham,
  • Gabriel da Rocha Fernandes,
  • Jacques Robert Nicoli,
  • Elisabeth Neumann,
  • Álvaro Cantini Nunes

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/applmicrobiol4030078
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 3
pp. 1150 – 1164

Abstract

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Comparative metatranscriptomics of the bacterial and yeast communities of two milk kefir beverages (MKAA1 and MKAA2) was carried out. They were obtained by fermentation with two different frozen stocks of the kefir grain CIDCA AGK1, differing in rheological features and production of organic acids. We hypothesised that the differences in their physicochemical and rheological properties might be due to the microbial activity in each product. The dominance of lactic acid bacteria, yeast, and a marginal amount of acetic acid bacteria characterised the microbiome. The bacterial families Lactobacillaceae and Streptococcaceae accounted for almost all of the bacterial gene transcripts, with Lactobacillus helveticus, L. kefiranofaciens, L. gallinarum, and Lactococcus lactis being most frequent in the microbiome of the MKAA1 beverage and L. kefiranofaciens, Lc. Lactis, and Leuconostoc mesenteroides being the most prevalent in MKAA2. Dipodascaceae and Saccharomycetaceae were the leading yeast families, represented by Yarrowia lipolytica, Saccharomyces unisporus, and Kluyveromyces marxianus. MKAA1 and MKAA2 shared >75% KEGG Ortologs (KOs) in their bacteria and yeast libraries. The considerable decreases in total expressed genes (KEGG Ortologs) assigned to Lactobacillus helveticus and L. gallinarum might be related to the variations in the rheological features of the beverages, probably by compromising the interrelations with L. kefiranofaciens, which might explain the variations in the rheological features of the beverages.

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