Lactic Acid Bacteria from Indigenous Fermented Foods and Their Antimicrobial Activity
https://doi.org/10.22146/jifnp.51
Endang S. Rahayu
(1*), Titiek F. Djaafar
(2), Djoko Wibowo
(3), Slamet Sudarmadji
(4)
(1) Gadjah Mada University
(2) Instalation for Research and Assessment of Agricultural Technology
(3) Gadjah Mada University
(4) Gadjah Mada University
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
Twenty-eight lactic acid bacteria ( LAB) strains were isolated from various indigenous fermented foods, i.e., asinan rebung (bamboo shoot pickle), asinan terong (eggplant pickle), gatot(fennented dried cassava), growol (fermented raw cassava), tape (fermented steamed cassava tubers), tempe (fermented soybean), tempoyak (fermented pulp of durian fruit), andmoromi. All strains found and identified belong to facultative hetero¬fermentative group lactobacilli. They produced DL-lactic acid, and contained meso-diaminopimelic acid in their peptidoglycan, and were identified as Lactobacillus plantarum and L pentosus complex. These strains were further determined for their antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus using disc assay and turbidimetric assay. Two among them, Lactobacillus TGR-2 (from growol) and Lactobacillus TMO-4 (from moromi) were able to increase the lag phase, and to suppress the final population of the S. aureus growth after 12 h incubation.

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22146/jifnp.51
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Indonesian Food and Nutrition Progress (print ISSN 0854-6177; online ISSN 2597-9388) is published by the Indonesian Association of Food Technologists in collaboration with the Department of Food and Agricultural Product Technology, Faculty of Agricultural Technology, Universitas Gadjah Mada.
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