Hi Karin,
I think you have chosen a wonderful topic and have some great ideas to test. I’m a big fan of probiotics like yogurt and like to think that it is really good for me—now you can figure out how it is beneficial!
Taking question 2 first, it’s my opinion that the greatest health benefits accrue from live lactobacilli. Isolating separate bacterial products and testing them is ok in the lab to understand the mechanism of the probiotic’s health-giving properties, but for actual therapy I would opt for the holistic approach. Here’s a good paper that discusses the ‘ecology’ of lactobacilli in the gastro-intestinal tract:
Probiotic lactobacilli in the gut.
Published ahead of print 6 June 2008, doi: 10.1128/AEM.00753-08 Appl. Environ. Microbiol. August 2008 vol. 74 no. 16 4985-4996 [
http://aem.asm.org/content/74/16/4985.full]
As to question 1 about aerobic vs anaerobic metabolism, this is complicated because the lactobacilli are facultative anaerobes, which means they can metabolize either way—with or without oxygen. In the gut their position would be essentially anaerobic (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK7670/). The picture is further clouded because some species of lactobacillus produce only lactose from fermentation while others can produce both lactose and ethanol (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactobacillus). Which species of lactobacillus did you have in mind to experiment with? They all increase the local acidity of their environment which inhibits growth of many human pathogens.
Your last question about bacteriocins, the proteins produced by some bacteria to kill other bacteria, is especially interesting. They are a sort of natural, narrow-spectrum (usually) antibiotic specific for certain types of bacteria usually including the producing species itself (
http://www.researchgate.net/post/What_i ... d_antibody).
I did a search for ‘lactobacillus bacteriocin’ on PubMed and came up with 53 pages of hits!
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?ter ... acteriocin This is an extremely complex subject because there are so many different bacteriocins. They are, I think, all proteins that are synthesized by the producing bacteria and probably secreted into the intestine or wherever the bacteria are. I did not see a paper explaining how bacteriocins kill their target bacteria, but the regulation of their synthesis may be by a recently discovered activity called quorum sensing:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quorum_sensing Quorum sensing is just a scientific term for the observation that bacteria regulate their protein production by ‘sensing’ the population of bacteria around them.
I have seen the bacterium
Lactobacillus plantarum mentioned frequently as a promising probiotic, so you might consider doing some tests with that species to see how well it kills other bacteria and what conditions promote its bacteriocin production
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24242246
I don’t want to give you TOO much information so I’ll stop here. Let us know what hypothesis you decide to test and we can help you design good experiments to test it.
Good luck!
Sybee