The Wine Ecosystem as a Reservoir for Potential Probiotics: A Comparative In Vitro Evaluation of Lactiplantibacillus plantarum and Oenococcus oeni Isolates
Chong Yuan, Yuanyuan Liu, Gongchen He, Tongxin Xu, Ping Wang, Jingyue Liu, Shuwen Liu, Kan Shi

TL;DR
This study explores bacteria from the wine ecosystem as potential probiotics, identifying strains that survive harsh conditions and could be used in probiotic applications.
Contribution
The study introduces new probiotic candidates from the wine ecosystem and evaluates their survival and functional traits under gastrointestinal conditions.
Findings
Strains M-1 and XJ14 of L. plantarum showed high viability in simulated gastrointestinal conditions.
XJA2 exhibited strong intestinal survival and unique functional traits despite gastric sensitivity.
All tested isolates were safe, lacking harmful traits like hemolytic activity or antibiotic resistance.
Abstract
The wine ecosystem constitutes a highly selective ecological niche characterized by low pH, high ethanol levels, sulfur dioxide, polyphenols, and nutrient limitation. During malolactic fermentation, this environment becomes dominated by specialized lactic acid bacteria (LAB), particularly Lactiplantibacillus plantarum and Oenococcus oeni, whose persistence under such stressors suggests the presence of adaptive traits relevant to probiotic development. In this study, twenty-three LAB isolates obtained from the spontaneous wine ecosystem were systematically evaluated through a multi-stage screening strategy. Primary single-factor assays revealed pronounced inter- and intraspecies variability in tolerance to acid, lysozyme, and bile salts. As a result, all O. oeni isolates and eight L. plantarum strains were excluded from further consideration. The four selected L. plantarum isolates (M-1,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProbiotics and Fermented Foods · Gut microbiota and health · Fermentation and Sensory Analysis
