Effects of lactic acid bacteria cultures on pathogenic microbiota from fish

13 páginas, 9 figuras, 4 tablas, 1 apéndice The concrete nature of the probiotic effects which the presence of micro-organisms (especially lactic acid bacteria: LAB) exercise on larval cultures of fish is not well defined, being attributable to different factors or action mechanisms. In fact, the pr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Aquaculture
Main Authors: Vázquez, José Antonio, González Fernández, Pilar, Murado García, Miguel Anxo
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/51206
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2004.12.008
Description
Summary:13 páginas, 9 figuras, 4 tablas, 1 apéndice The concrete nature of the probiotic effects which the presence of micro-organisms (especially lactic acid bacteria: LAB) exercise on larval cultures of fish is not well defined, being attributable to different factors or action mechanisms. In fact, the production of diverse antibacterial metabolites (bacteriocins in particular) by many LAB forms may constitute the basis of these probiotic effects, as is repeatedly described in literature. Accordingly, the inhibition of pathogenic species in fish by extracts of LAB constitutes a rapid method for detecting potential probiotics. By studying the response of four common pathogens of turbot (Scophthalmus maximus) to nine potential probiotics, the diversity and mechanisms of effectors in the probiotics were shown to present complex dose–response and non-treatable profiles with conventional models. Proposed modifications allow satisfactory fits and the calculation of useful parameters in the comparison of activities. The results showed that lactic and acetic acids, and not the bacteriocins, are responsible for the effects (inhibitory or stimulatory depending on the concentrations considered) in all the cases studied. This work was supported by the projects Improved procedures for flatfish larval rearing through the use of probiotic bacteria (PROBE) from the European Commission (contract no. Q5RS-2000-31457) and Production and Application of Probiotics in the Improvement of Larval Survival in Larval Cultures of Sea Fish (1FD97-0044-C03-01/02) from CICYTFEDER. Peer reviewed