Article in Journal

The Ability of Streptococcus thermophilus BT01 to Modulate Urease Activity in Healthy Subjects’ Fecal Samples Depends on the Biomass Production Process

Martinović, A., Chittaro, M., Mora, D., & Arioli, S.

Molecular Nutrition & Food Research, 2023, 67(6), 2200529

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January 27, 2023



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Scope
This study evaluates how manufacturing conditions of probiotic biomass production, using two different cryoprotectants, Cryo-A and Cryo-B, can affect Streptococcus thermophilus BT01 in vivo gastrointestinal tract survival and its ability to modulate the level of urease activity in fecal samples of healthy subjects.

Methods and results
A randomized controlled cross-over study is carried out on 20 adult healthy subjects to evaluate total and viable loads, persistence of S. thermophilus BT01, and urease activity in fecal samples. Strain-specific quantification by using developed culture-based method and molecular qPCR tool allows to quantify viable S. thermophilus BT01 strain in 90% of the subjects. The quantification of both total DNA and recovered viable S. thermophilus BT01 in fecal samples does not reveal significant differences between Cryo-A or Cryo-B treated biomass. However, the administration of S. thermophilus BT01 produced with Cryo-A results in a decreased urease activity in fecal samples compared to Cryo-B protected cells.

Conclusion
This study i) highlights how the manufacturing conditions can play a role in influencing the probiotic functionality in vivo and ii) represents the first evidence that links S. thermophilus to a specific probiotic mechanism, the reduction of urease activity in fecal samples.

This research output is related to

Spoke 04

Food quality and nutrition

To push towards sustainable and tailored food and nutrition

Lead organisationUniMi

Spoke leaderPatrizia Riso

Referred to

Spoke 04
Research projectUTOPY

Microbial functions interfering with host physiology


Managed by


Principal investigators

Diego Mora

Referred to

Spoke 04