Bunthof Christine J, Abee Tjakko
Laboratory of Food Microbiology, Department of Agrotechnology and Food Sciences, Wageningen University, 6700 EV Wageningen, The Netherlands. Christine.
Appl Environ Microbiol. 2002 Jun;68(6):2934-42. doi: 10.1128/AEM.68.6.2934-2942.2002.
Flow cytometry (FCM) is a rapid and sensitive technique that can determine cell numbers and measure various physiological characteristics of individual cells by using appropriate fluorescent probes. Previously, we developed an FCM assay with the viability probes carboxyfluorescein diacetate (cFDA) and TOTO-1 [1'-(4,4,7,7-tetramethyl-4,7-diazaundecamethylene)-bis-4-[3-methyl-2,3dihydro(benzo-1,3-oxazole)-2-methylidene]-1-(3'-trimethylammoniumpropyl)-pyridinium tetraiodide] for (stressed) lactic acid bacteria (C. J. Bunthof, K. Bloemen, P. Breeuwer, F. M. Rombouts, and T. Abee, Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 67:2326-2335, 2001). cFDA stains intact cells with enzymatic activity, and TOTO-1 stains membrane-permeabilized cells. Here we used this assay to study the viability of bacterial suspensions in milk, dairy fermentation starters, and probiotic products. To facilitate FCM analysis of bacteria in milk, a commercially available milk-clearing solution was used. The procedure was optimized to increase the signal-to-noise ratio. FCM enumerations were accurate down to a concentration of 10(5) cells ml(-1). The level of retrieval of Lactobacillus plantarum WCFS 1 suspended in milk was high, and viability was not affected by the procedure. The plate counts for cleared samples of untreated cell suspensions were nearly as high as the total FCM counts, and the correlation was strong (r > 0.99). In dairy fermentation starters and in probiotic products the FCM total cell counts were substantially higher than the numbers of CFU. Three functional populations could be distinguished: culturable cells, cells that are intact and metabolically active but not culturable, and permeabilized cells. The proportions of the populations differed in the products tested. This FCM method provides tools to assess the functionality of different populations in fermentation starters and probiotic products.
流式细胞术(FCM)是一种快速且灵敏的技术,它可以通过使用合适的荧光探针来确定细胞数量并测量单个细胞的各种生理特征。此前,我们开发了一种利用活性探针羧基荧光素二乙酸酯(cFDA)和TOTO-1 [1'-(4,4,7,7-四甲基-4,7-二氮杂十一亚甲基)-双-4-[3-甲基-2,3-二氢(苯并-1,3-恶唑)-2-亚甲基]-1-(3'-三甲基铵丙基)-吡啶四碘化物] 对(应激的)乳酸菌进行检测的FCM分析方法(C. J. 邦托夫、K. 布洛门、P. 布勒韦尔、F. M. 龙博茨和T. 阿贝,《应用与环境微生物学》67:2326 - 2335,2001年)。cFDA对具有酶活性的完整细胞进行染色,而TOTO-1对细胞膜通透的细胞进行染色。在此,我们使用该分析方法来研究牛奶、乳制品发酵剂和益生菌产品中细菌悬液的活力。为便于对牛奶中的细菌进行FCM分析,使用了一种市售的牛奶澄清溶液。对该程序进行了优化以提高信噪比。FCM计数在细胞浓度低至10(5) 个细胞/毫升时仍准确无误。悬浮于牛奶中的植物乳杆菌WCFS 1的回收率很高,且活力不受该程序的影响。未处理细胞悬液的澄清样品的平板计数几乎与FCM总计数一样高,且相关性很强(r > 0.99)。在乳制品发酵剂和益生菌产品中,FCM总细胞计数显著高于菌落形成单位(CFU)数量。可以区分出三个功能群体:可培养细胞、完整且代谢活跃但不可培养的细胞以及通透细胞。在所测试的产品中,这些群体的比例有所不同。这种FCM方法为评估发酵剂和益生菌产品中不同群体的功能提供了工具。