Microbial Biotechnology (Nov 2019)
Development of omics‐based protocols for the microbiological characterization of multi‐strain formulations marketed as probiotics: the case of VSL#3
Abstract
Summary The growing commercial interest in multi‐strain formulations marketed as probiotics has not been accompanied by an equal increase in the evaluation of quality levels of these biotechnological products. The multi‐strain product VSL#3 was used as a model to setup a microbiological characterization that could be extended to other formulations with high complexity. Shotgun metagenomics by deep Illumina sequencing was applied to DNA isolated from the commercial VSL#3 product to confirm strains identity safety and composition. Single‐cell analysis was used to evaluate the cell viability, and β‐galactosidase and urease activity have been used as marker to monitor the reproducibility of the production process. Similarly, these lots were characterized in detail by a metaproteomics approach for which a robust protein extraction protocol was combined with advanced mass spectrometry. The results identified over 1600 protein groups belonging to all strains present in the VSL#3 formulation. Of interest, only 3.2 % proteins showed significant differences mainly related to small variations in strain abundance. The protocols developed in this study addressed several quality criteria that are relevant for marketed multi‐strain products and these represent the first efforts to define the quality of complex probiotic formulations such as VSL#3.