Are Ruminal Bacteria Armed with Bacteriocins?
Open Access
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Dairy Science Association in Journal of Dairy Science
- Vol. 79 (12) , 2297-2306
- https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.s0022-0302(96)76608-0
Abstract
The production of toxic compounds or antibiotics is a common component of intermicrobial competitive interactions, and many of these toxins have been adopted and adapted for the control of microbial populations. One class of these toxins, the bacteriocins, is a heterogeneous group of proteinaceous antibiotics that often display a high degree of target specificity, although many have a very wide spectrum of activity. To date, only limited information is available concerning the occurrence of bacteriocins among ruminal isolates or the sensitivity of ruminal microorganisms to exogenous bacteriocins. A survey of 50 strains of Butyrivibrio spp. isolated from a variety of sources (sheep, deer, and cattle) for bacteriocin production indicated a high incidence of bacteriocin-like activity (50%). Many of these inhibitory compounds appear to have a broad spectrum of activity, which suggests that bacteriocins may have a significant impact on both the competitive fitness of individual microbial strains within the rumen and on the overall structure of the microbial population within the rumen. Selected bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria also were shown to have activity against Butyrivibrio spp. and may have application in ruminant systems. Bacteriocins may provide an alternative group of antibiotics for the manipulation of ruminal microbial populations. Bacteriocins have significant advantages over other antibiotics in target specificity, susceptibility to proteolytic digestion, possibility of genetic transfer and manipulation, and, in the case of some bacteriocins derived from lactic acid bacteria, a long history of safe use.Keywords
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