Authors
Daniela M Remus, Richard van Kranenburg, Iris I van Swam, Nico Taverne, Roger S Bongers, Michiel Wels, Jerry M Wells, Peter A Bron, Michiel Kleerebezem
Publication date
2012/12
Journal
Microbial Cell Factories
Volume
11
Pages
1-10
Publisher
BioMed Central
Description
Background
Bacterial cell surface-associated polysaccharides are involved in the interactions of bacteria with their environment and play an important role in the communication between pathogenic bacteria and their host organisms. Cell surface polysaccharides of probiotic species are far less well described. Therefore, improved knowledge on these molecules is potentially of great importance to understand the strain-specific and proposed beneficial modes of probiotic action.
Results
The Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS1 genome encodes 4 clusters of genes that are associated with surface polysaccharide production. Two of these clusters appear to encode all functions required for capsular polysaccharide formation (cps2A-J and cps4A-J), while the remaining clusters are predicted to lack genes encoding chain-length control functions and a priming …
Total citations
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