Lactococcus lactis

From Citizendium
Revision as of 13:43, 1 May 2009 by imported>Julie Evans
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This article is developing and not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
 
This editable Main Article is under development and subject to a disclaimer.
Lactococcus lactis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Bacteria
Phylum: Firmicutes
Class: Bacilli
Order: Lactobacillales
Family: Streptococcaceae
Genus: Lactococcus
Species: L.lactis
Binomial name
Lactococcus lactis

Description and significance

"Lactococcus Lactis" is a non pathogenic,Gram-positive bacteria known as one of the most important microbes in dairy food production. Lactococci lactis, which is closely related to the strptococcus genus, has two subspecies,L. lactis subsp. and Lactococcus cremoris subsp. They are used to make soft and hard cheese respectively. L.Lactis group in pairs or short chains with a length of about 1.2µm by 1.5µm. Lactococci are immotile, nonsporelating, and are usually spherical or ovoid cells. L. Lactis is the starter culture for the production of fermented dairy products such as milk, cheese, yogurt, etc.Lactococcus is considered a opurtunistic pathogen, because of its ability to convert almost all it's sugar into lactic acid. Lactic acid produced by the the microbe curdles the milk which seperates into curds inturn are used to produce cheese and whey.In nature, L. lactis is found to be inactive on plant surfaces and on to multiply in the gastrointestinal tract after being swallowed by an animal.

Genome structure

L. lactis' genome has been sequenced to investigate, what specificly, is its essential role in dairy fermentation. Unexpected features of the analyzed genome have been disclosed, genes are seen to enable the bacterium to perform aerobic respiration along with horizontal gene transfer by transformation. Decades of research has been attributed to the genome sequencing and comparative genomics of L. lactis to unveil the characteristics of L.lactis that can specifically develop flavor, and improve quality and preservation of dairy products such as cheese. L. lactis is a circular chromosome, its genome contains 2,365,589 base pairs. Protein-coding genes represent 86% of the genome, stable RNA 1.4%, and noncoding regions 12.6%. These percentages are very similar to other bacteria genome. Biological functions have been assigned to 64% of the genome, 20.1% have similar genome to other unknown proteins, however, 15% of the genome is unidentifiable. This 15% is hypothesized to contain the traits specific to L.lactis.