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Saudi J Biol Sci ; 31(1): 103879, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38090133

ABSTRACT

Dromedary camel or Arabian camel (Camelus dromedarius) has great economic importance due to its milk and byproducts. Its milk has high nutrition along with healthy bacteria such as Lactic acid bacteria helpful in the fermentation process. The aim was to compare the probiotic bacteria from one week of lactating camel milk vs one year lactating camel milk to differentiate the potential probiotics. This study analyzed the microbiomes of one year lactating raw camel milk M1, M2 (A) (n = 10) and one week of lactating camel milk M3, M4 (B) (n = 10) through metagenomic analysis of 16S rRNA. In total, 276 species were found in two groups (A and B) and they shared 55 genes. Group B showed a higher number of species (2 2 0) than group A (56). The statistical data on functional annotations such as Card, COG, NOG and Swiss-prot revealed at least one or more contributions from this study sample database. The phylum Proteobacteria contributed largely up to 75 % in group B. In contrast, Ascomycota and Verrucomicrobia existed in higher quantity in group A than in group B and Firmicutes were slightly higher in group A than in group B. Actinobacteria were higher in group B whereas Bacteroidetes dominated in group A than group B. The potential probiotic bacteria found in camel milk including Enterococcus faecalis, Enterococcus faecium, Propionibacterium, Streptococcus thermophilus, Solibacillus silvestris and Akkermansia muciniphila. Despite the probiotic bacteria some pathogenic microbes also resided in the studied samples, hence it is strongly recommended proper sterilization before consumption. This proposed research is to get an efficient microbial consortium of beneficial bacteria and their functional roles.

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