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Dive into the research topics where Maria Emanuela Fornasari is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Emanuela Fornasari.


Food Microbiology | 2011

Characterization and probiotic potential of Lactobacillus plantarum strains isolated from cheeses

Miriam Zago; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Domenico Carminati; Patricia Burns; Viviana Suárez; Gabriel Vinderola; Jorge Reinheimer; Giorgio Giraffa

Ninety-eight Lactobacillus plantarum strains isolated from Italian and Argentinean cheeses were evaluated for probiotic potential. After a preliminary subtractive screening based on the presence of msa and bsh genes, 27 strains were characterized. In general, the selected strains showed high resistance to lysozyme, good adaptation to simulated gastric juice, and a moderate to low bile tolerance. The capacity to agglutinate yeast cells in a mannose-specific manner, as well as the cell surface hydrophobicity was found to be variable among strains. Very high β-galactosidase activity was shown by a considerable number of the tested strains, whereas variable prebiotic utilization ability was observed. Only tetracycline resistance was observed in two highly resistant strains which harbored the tetM gene, whereas none of the strains showed β-glucuronidase activity or was capable of inhibiting pathogens. Three strains (Lp790, Lp813, and Lp998) were tested by in vivo trials. A considerable heterogeneity was found among a number of L. plantarum strains screened in this study, leading to the design of multiple cultures to cooperatively link strains showing the widest range of useful traits. Among the selected strains, Lp790, Lp813, and Lp998 showed the best probiotic potential and would be promising candidates for inclusion as starter cultures for the manufacture of probiotic fermented foods.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2008

Grana Padano cheese whey starters: microbial composition and strain distribution.

Lia Rossetti; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Monica Gatti; Camilla Lazzi; Erasmo Neviani; Giorgio Giraffa

The aim of this work was to evaluate the species composition and the genotypic strain heterogeneity of dominant lactic acid bacteria (LAB) isolated from whey starter cultures used to manufacture Grana Padano cheese. Twenty-four Grana Padano cheese whey starters collected from dairies located over a wide geographic production area in the north of Italy were analyzed. Total thermophilic LAB streptococci and lactobacilli were quantified by agar plate counting. Population structure of the dominant and metabolically active LAB species present in the starters was profiled by reverse transcriptase, length heterogeneity-PCR (RT-LH-PCR), a culture-independent technique successfully applied to study whey starter ecosystems. The dominant bacterial species were Lactobacillus helveticus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. lactis, Streptococcus thermophilus, and Lactobacillus fermentum. Diversity in the species composition allowed the whey cultures to be grouped into four main typologies, the one containing L. helveticus, L. delbrueckii subsp. lactis, and S. thermophilus being the most frequent one (45% of the cultures analyzed), followed by that containing only the two lactobacilli (40%). Only a minor fraction of the cultures contained L. helveticus alone (4%) or all the four LAB species (11%). Five hundred and twelve strains were isolated from the 24 cultures and identified by M13-PCR fingerprinting coupled with 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Most of the strains were L. helveticus (190 strains; 37% of the total), L delbrueckii subsp. lactis (90 strains; 18%) and S. thermophilus (215 strains; 42%). This result was in good agreement with the qualitative whey starter composition observed by RT-LH-PCR. M13-PCR fingerprinting indicated a markedly low infra-species diversity, i.e. the same biotypes were often found in more than one culture. The distribution of the biotypes into the different cultures was mainly dairy plant-specific rather than correlated with the different production areas.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2008

Quantification of Enterococcus italicus in traditional Italian cheeses by fluorescence whole-cell hybridization

Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Lia Rossetti; Chiara Remagni; Giorgio Giraffa

The objective of this work was to investigate the spread of Enterococcus italicus in cheese. For this purpose, a fluorescence whole-cell hybridization protocol (FWCH) with a 16S rRNA probe was optimized to evaluate the presence and abundance of this organism in artisanal Italian cheeses. The FWCH method avoided the quantification problems using classical plate count techniques related to the well-known difficulties to cultivate E. italicus in selective enterococci media. After probe and FWCH optimization, 10 commercially available Italian semi-hard cheeses made with raw ewe or cow milk without starter addition were analyzed. All of them were subjected to FWCH experiments and six of them gave positive results with the probe, i.e. the E. italicus content was >4 log cells/g according to the detection limit of FWCH. Counts showed that E. italicus was present at levels ranging from 5.91+/-0.17 to 7.34+/-0.14 log cells/g; such levels were similar to, or even higher than, the total enterococci counted from the corresponding cheeses using kanamycin aesculin azide agar. The overall reliability of the FWCH method was tested by species-specific PCR. The positive amplification of the expected 323 bp fragment from both a cheese matrix and cell bulks of cheese samples containing high loads of this organism (as determined by FWCH counts) and the successful isolation of E. italicus strains from the above cheeses provided definitive proof of both probe specificity and the presence of this organism in cheeses. Although there is very little available quantitative data on the incidence of E. italicus in cheese, or its role in product quality, this study showed a wide diffusion of this organism in artisanal cheeses, where secondary non-starter lactic acid bacterial microflora, which enterococci belong to, may become dominant during ripening.


Journal of Microbiological Methods | 2012

Epifluorescence and atomic force microscopy: Two innovative applications for studying phage-host interactions in Lactobacillus helveticus.

Miriam Zago; Erika Scaltriti; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Claudio Rivetti; Stefano Grolli; Giorgio Giraffa; Roberto Ramoni; Domenico Carminati

Bacteriophages attacking lactic acid bacteria (LAB) still represent a crucial problem in industrial dairy fermentations. The consequences of a phage infection against LAB can lead to fermentation delay, alteration of the product quality and, in most severe cases, the product loss. Phage particles enumeration and phage-host interactions are normally evaluated by conventional plaque count assays, but, in many cases, these methods can be unsuccessful. Bacteriophages of Lactobacillus helveticus, a LAB species widely used as dairy starter or probiotic cultures, are often unable to form lysis plaques, thus impairing their enumeration by plate assay. In this study, we used epifluorescence microscopy to enumerate L. helveticus phage particles from phage-infected cultures and Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to visualize both phages and bacteria during the different stages of the lytic cycle. Preliminary, we tested the sensitivity of phage counting by epifluorescence microscopy. To this end, phage particles of ΦAQ113, a lytic phage of L. helveticus isolated from a whey starter culture, were stained by SYBR Green I and enumerated by epifluorescence microscopy. Values obtained by the microscopic method were 10 times higher than plate counts, with a lowest sensitivity limit of ≥6log phage/ml. The interaction of phage ΦAQ113 with its host cell L. helveticus Lh1405 was imaged by AFM after 0, 2 and 5h from phage-host adsorption. The lytic cycle was followed by epifluorescence microscopy counting and the concomitant cell wall changes were visualized by AFM imaging. Our results showed that these two methods can be combined for a reliable phage enumeration and for studying phage and host morphology during infection processes, thus giving a complete overview of phage-host interactions in L. helveticus strains involved in dairy productions.


Annals of Microbiology | 2007

Population dynamics of lactobacilli in Grana cheese

Miriam Zago; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Lia Rossetti; Barbara Bonvini; Laura Scano; Domenico Carminati; Giorgio Giraffa

A survey on the presence, microbial diversity, and population dynamics of lactobacilli in Grana cheese is presented. Evolution of thermophilic rod lactic acid bacteria within the first two days from cheese making and during ripening was different according to different bacterial groups, which were selectively enumerated and identified by molecular methods. Species-specific microbial counts indicated prevalence ofLactobacillus helveticus in both the whey starter and the cheese at moulding, and ofLactobacillus delbrueckii subsp.lactis in cheese after two months of ripening. In more advanced ripening, a decrease of total thermophilic lactobacilli and an increase of mesophilic lactobacilli (mostly belonging toLactobacillus casei/paracasei andLactobacillus rhamnosus) was observed. PCR fingerprinting of lactobacilli, which was performed by PCR-fingerprinting, indicated a marked microbial heterogeneity within theLactobacillus spp. populations, which enabled strain (or group)-specific fingerprints to be observed.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 1999

Presence of peptidase activities in different varieties of cheese

Monica Gatti; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; G. Mucchetti; F. Addeo; Erasmo Neviani

Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) counts, PepX activity towards H‐Phe‐Pro‐βNA, and aminopeptidase activity towards H‐Arg‐βNA.HCl, H‐Lys‐βNA, H‐Leu‐βNA, H‐Pro‐βNA, H‐Glu‐βNA derivatives have been evaluated in 32 commercial samples of cheese, one processed cheese, and one yoghurt. The presence of intracellular exo‐peptidase activities in cheese extracts free from bacterial cells was detected, even after 1 year of ripening. An inverse ratio between the presence of viable lactic microflora and peptidase activity in the cheese extracts was observed. The importance of LAB starter exo‐peptidases in the degradation of casein oligopeptides, and the key role of autolysis in the release of peptidases in the cheese, are discussed.


Letters in Applied Microbiology | 2014

Biotyping of cultivable lactic acid bacteria isolated from donkey milk

Domenico Carminati; F. Tidona; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Lia Rossetti; A. Meucci; Giorgio Giraffa

The diversity of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) species in donkeys milk was analysed by culture‐dependent microbial techniques. Dominant strains were isolated on agar media generally used for enumerating LAB. To enrich the number of acidifying LAB present, the milk samples were incubated at 37°C for 24 h (cultured milk samples, CM). One of the CM samples was heat‐treated at 63°C for 10 min before incubation at 37°C (heat‐treated and cultured milk sample, TCM) to select thermophilic LAB. The microflora in these CM and TCM samples was then compared to that of the raw milk samples (RM). Among the 129 LAB isolates, 10 different species (four Enterococcus, five Streptococcus and one Pediococcus) were identified by molecular methods. Although the 10 LAB species were present in the RM samples, only three and two isolates were found in CM and TCM samples, respectively. Despite the selection protocol being set up to favour the isolation of all LAB isolates present in donkey milk, relatively few species and biotypes were isolated. No LAB isolates belonging to the most technologically important dairy starter species were detected. The possible factors related to the limited LAB diversity in donkeys milk have been discussed below.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2005

Heterogeneity of putative surface layer proteins in Lactobacillus helveticus.

Monica Gatti; Lia Rossetti; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Camilla Lazzi; Giorgio Giraffa; Erasmo Neviani

ABSTRACT The S-layer-encoding genes of 21 Lactobacillus helveticus strains were characterized. Phylogenetic analysis based on the identified S-layer genes revealed two main clusters, one which includes a sequence similar to that of the slpH1 gene of L. helveticus CNRZ 892 and a second cluster which includes genes similar to that of prtY. These results were further confirmed by Southern blot hybridization. This study demonstrates S-layer gene variability in the species L. helveticus.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Characterization of the Genome of the Dairy Lactobacillus helveticus Bacteriophage ΦAQ113

Miriam Zago; Erika Scaltriti; Lia Rossetti; Alessandro Guffanti; Angelarita Armiento; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Stefano Grolli; Domenico Carminati; Elena Brini; Paolo Pavan; Armando Felsani; Annalisa D'Urzo; Anna Moles; Jean-Baptiste Claude; Rita Grandori; Roberto Ramoni; Giorgio Giraffa

ABSTRACT The complete genomic sequence of the dairy Lactobacillus helveticus bacteriophage ΦAQ113 was determined. Phage ΦAQ113 is a Myoviridae bacteriophage with an isometric capsid and a contractile tail. The final assembled consensus sequence revealed a linear, circularly permuted, double-stranded DNA genome with a size of 36,566 bp and a G+C content of 37%. Fifty-six open reading frames (ORFs) were predicted, and a putative function was assigned to approximately 90% of them. The ΦAQ113 genome shows functionally related genes clustered together in a genome structure composed of modules for DNA replication/regulation, DNA packaging, head and tail morphogenesis, cell lysis, and lysogeny. The identification of genes involved in the establishment of lysogeny indicates that it may have originated as a temperate phage, even if it was isolated from natural cheese whey starters as a virulent phage, because it is able to propagate in a sensitive host strain. Additionally, we discovered that the ΦAQ113 phage genome is closely related to Lactobacillus gasseri phage KC5a and Lactobacillus johnsonii phage Lj771 genomes. The phylogenetic similarities between L. helveticus phage ΦAQ113 and two phages that belong to gut species confirm a possible common ancestral origin and support the increasing consideration of L. helveticus as a health-promoting organism.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2015

Lactococcus hircilactis sp. nov. and Lactococcus laudensis sp. nov., isolated from milk.

Aurora Meucci; Miriam Zago; Lia Rossetti; Maria Emanuela Fornasari; Barbara Bonvini; Flavio Tidona; Milena Povolo; Giovanna Contarini; Domenico Carminati; Giorgio Giraffa

Two strains of lactic acid bacteria, designated 117(T) and 4195(T), were isolated from goat milk in Valtellina, Italy and from cow milk in Valle Trompia, Italy, respectively, and characterized taxonomically by a polyphasic approach. The strains were Gram-stain-positive, coccoid, non-spore-forming and catalase-negative bacteria. Morphological, physiological and phylogenetic data indicated that these isolates belonged to the genus Lactococcus. Strain 117(T) was closely related to Lactococcus fujiensis, Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis, L. lactis subsp. cremoris, L. lactis subsp. hordniae, L. lactis subsp. tructae and Lactococcus taiwanensis, showing 93-94% and 82-89% 16S rRNA and rpoB gene sequence similarities, respectively. Strain 4195(T) was closely related to Lactococcus chungangensis, Lactococcus raffinolactis, Lactococcus plantarum and Lactococcus piscium, showing 92-98% and 86-99% 16S rRNA and rpoB gene sequence similarities, respectively. Based on this evidence and the data obtained in the present study, the milk isolates represent two novel species of the genus Lactococcus, for which the names Lactococcushircilactis sp. nov., and Lactococcuslaudensis sp. nov. are proposed. The respective type strains are 117(T) ( = LMG 28352(T) = DSM 28960(T)) and 4195(T )( = LMG 28353(T) = DSM 28961(T)).

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Giorgio Giraffa

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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Lia Rossetti

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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Domenico Carminati

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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Miriam Zago

Consiglio per la ricerca e la sperimentazione in agricoltura

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