Lactic acid bacteria: beyond fermentation to bio-protection against fungal spoilage and mycotoxins in food systems
- Author: mycolabadmin
- 6/30/2025
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Summary
Background
Fungal contamination and mycotoxin production represent significant global food safety challenges, causing approximately 5-10% of food production losses and substantial economic damage. Conventional chemical preservatives like potassium sorbate and calcium propionate are increasingly rejected by consumers due to health concerns, driving demand for natural preservation alternatives. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) have emerged as promising bio-preservatives due to their GRAS/QPS status and ability to produce diverse antimicrobial compounds.
Objective
This narrative review aims to comprehensively evaluate LAB mechanisms for mycotoxin detoxification, explore LAB-fungi interactions in real food systems, and identify promising LAB strains for biopreservation applications in both fermented and non-fermented food products. The review bridges gaps in existing literature by focusing on practical performance in food matrices rather than metabolite diversity alone.
Results
Conclusion
- Published in:Frontiers in Microbiology,
- Study Type:Review,
- Source: PMC12256551; PMID: 40661977