Consolidated Bioprocessing in a Dairy Setting─Concurrent Yoghurt Fermentation and Lactose Hydrolysis without Using Lactase Enzymes

Belay Tilahun Tadesse, Ge Zhao, Paul Kempen, Christian Solem*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Streptococcus thermophilus is a fast-growing lactic acid bacterium (LAB) used in yoghurt and cheese manufacturing. Recently, we reported how this bacterium could serve as a cell catalyst for hydrolyzing lactose when permeabilized by nisin A. To enhance the lactose hydrolyzing activity of S. thermophilus, we mutated a dairy strain and screened for variants with elevated β-galactosidase activity. Two isolates, ST30-8 and ST95, had 2.4-fold higher activity. Surprisingly, both strains were able to hydrolyze lactose when used as whole-cell lactase catalysts without permeabilization, and ST30-8 hydrolyzed 30 g/L lactose in 6 h at 50 °C using 0.18 g/L cells. Moreover, both strains hydrolyzed lactose while growing in milk. Genome sequencing revealed a mutation in l-lactate dehydrogenase, which we believe hampers growth and increases the capacity of S. thermophilus to hydrolyze lactose. Our findings will allow production of sweet lactose-reduced yoghurt without the use of costly purified lactase enzymes.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Volume70
Issue number37
Pages (from-to)11623-11630
Number of pages8
ISSN0021-8561
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Keywords

  • Chemical mutagenesis
  • EMS
  • S. thermophilus
  • lactose hydrolysis
  • β-galactosidase

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