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Lactobacillus

1,875 bytes added, 12:56, 10 August 2017
new section "Alcohol and Sugar Tolerance"
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J2g5P7ZlGn4 Per Buer's Video Demonstration of how dry hopping inhibits ''Lactobacillus''.]
* [https://www.ratebeer.com/forums/lab-and-hops_289071.htm "CLevar" on Ratebeer.com data point on ''Lactobacillus'' being inhibited by hops, but not as much by iso-alpha acid hop extract.]
 
====Alcohol and Sugar Tolerance====
''Lactobacillus'' is generally tolerant of alcohol and high levels of sugar (although growth is diminished once sugar content exceeds 20% due to osmisis stressing the cell wall). In the presence of high amounts of ethanol, the alcohol tolerant strains pack their cell walls with fatty acids, which slows the fluidity of the cell membrane. The alcohol tolerance of ''Lactobacillus'' is dependent on both strain and the growth substrate, with alcohol tolerance generally higher when glucose or starch are available. In one study that looked at 31 strains of ''Lactobacillus'', all strains grew effectively at 4% ABV. All of them still grew at 10% ABV, although some strains exhibited diffulty growing effectively at 10% ABV. Growth was diminished in general at 12% ABV (and the few strains that were alcohol intolerant stopped growing), but most still achieved some growth. Eight of the strains tested were still able to exhibit signficant growth at 16% ABV, and in general most strains were able to exhibit at least small growth at 16% ABV (more so on starch and glucose versus cellobiose, lactose, or xylose). In general, the species that were less tolerant of high amounts of ethanol (10-16%) where: ''L. amylovorous'' (1 out of 4 strains was particularly intolerant), ''L. hilgardii'' (1 strain still grew at 16% ABV, but less than the others), ''L. pentosus'' (1 strain still grew on starch medium, but not on glucose above 10% ABV), and ''L. casei'' (most strains grew in most growth media, but generally less than other species). In general, the strains of ''L. brevis'' and ''L. plantarum'' were more tolerant of high ABV concentrations <ref>[https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF01583633 Ethanol tolerance and carbohydrate metabolism in lactobacilli. R. Shane GoldM. M. MeagherR. HutkinsT. Conway. 1992.]</ref>.
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