Safety and probiotic characterization of Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus SAL2: insights from integrated genomics and functional validation
Jie Sun, Zhixue Li, Xinyi Lin, Jinlian Huang, Yamin Chen, Yuzhen Xu, Yanping Xu, Xueying Cheng, Ben Liu, Yongzhi Lun

TL;DR
This study shows that Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus SAL2 is a safe probiotic with strong antioxidant properties, making it a promising candidate for functional foods.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel integrated genomic and functional approach to probiotic characterization, revealing extracellular metabolites as key mediators of antioxidant activity.
Findings
L. rhamnosus SAL2 has a single circular chromosome with genes primarily involved in carbohydrate metabolism and transport.
The strain exhibited strong antioxidant activity through both intact cells and cell-free supernatants.
L. rhamnosus SAL2 matched the safety profile of L. rhamnosus GG but showed superior antioxidant performance.
Abstract
Integrated genomic-phenotypic frameworks provide a more comprehensive approach to probiotic characterization, resolving longstanding ambiguities in strain safety assessment. Crucially, extracellular metabolites–not cell-bound components–emerge as dominant mediators of bacterial antioxidant activity, thereby refining the mechanistic understanding of microbial reactive oxygen species mitigation. This study evaluated the probiotic potential and safety of Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus SAL2 using whole-genome sequencing and functional validation. Hybrid Illumina/PacBio sequencing enabled complete de novo assembly, annotation, and pathogenicity assessment of this independently isolated strain. We benchmarked L. rhamnosus SAL2 against the reference strain L. rhamnosus GG through multidimensional assessment of safety and probiotic characterization. Antioxidant capacity was further evaluated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProbiotics and Fermented Foods · Bacterial Genetics and Biotechnology · Gut microbiota and health
