Identifying the essential nutritional requirements of the probiotic bacteria Bifidobacterium animalis and Bifidobacterium longum through genome-scale modeling
Journal article, 2021

Although bifidobacteria are widely used as probiotics, their metabolism and physiology remain to be explored in depth. In this work, strain-specific genome-scale metabolic models were developed for two industrially and clinically relevant bifidobacteria, Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis BB-12® and B. longum subsp. longum BB-46, and subjected to iterative cycles of manual curation and experimental validation. A constraint-based modeling framework was used to probe the metabolic landscape of the strains and identify their essential nutritional requirements. Both strains showed an absolute requirement for pantethine as a precursor for coenzyme A biosynthesis. Menaquinone-4 was found to be essential only for BB-46 growth, whereas nicotinic acid was only required by BB-12®. The model-generated insights were used to formulate a chemically defined medium that supports the growth of both strains to the same extent as a complex culture medium. Carbohydrate utilization profiles predicted by the models were experimentally validated. Furthermore, model predictions were quantitatively validated in the newly formulated medium in lab-scale batch fermentations. The models and the formulated medium represent valuable tools to further explore the metabolism and physiology of the two species, investigate the mechanisms underlying their health-promoting effects and guide the optimization of their industrial production processes.

Author

Marie Schöpping

Chr. Hansen

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Industrial Biotechnology

Paula Gaspar

Chr. Hansen

Ana Rute Neves

Chr. Hansen

Arla Foods

Carl Johan Franzén

Chalmers, Biology and Biological Engineering, Industrial Biotechnology

Ahmad A. Zeidan

Chr. Hansen

npj Systems Biology and Applications

20567189 (eISSN)

Vol. 7 1 47

Subject Categories

Pharmaceutical Sciences

Applied Mechanics

Bioinformatics (Computational Biology)

DOI

10.1038/s41540-021-00207-4

PubMed

34887435

More information

Latest update

12/20/2021