Lactose was also eliminated using microbiological methods, so that those with lactose intolerance could enjoy the yogurt.
"The goal was to engineer the yogurt bacteria not to consume glucose, a fermentation product that is a particularly sweet form of sugar," said Eric Johansen from Chr Hansen Holding A/S - a global bioscience company in Denmark.
In certain countries, yogurt contains live cultures of bacteria - Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp bulgaricus.
Normally, when grown in milk, the two bacterial species break down lactose, a disaccharide, into its monosaccharide components, glucose and galactose. They consume the glucose and secrete the galactose, researchers said.
"In the first step, the investigators grew S thermophilus on a medium where galactose was the sole food source. Thus, individual bacteria had to consume galactose in order to grow. A few mutants were capable of doing so, and the investigators cultured these," he said.
The next steps were to modify the bacteria so that they would no longer consume glucose, and would no longer even transport glucose into the cell.
Researchers grew the bacteria in a medium containing a glucose analog called 2-deoxyglucose, which is toxic to cells.
Researchers also used 2-deoxyglucose to isolate mutants of Lactobacillus bulgaricus, to select for mutants that were unable to transport glucose into the cell. This prevented them from consuming the glucose produced by S thermophilus.
The yoghurt was now made with the modified bacteria. The yogurt had very little lactose, and not much galactose. But it was high in glucose - and sweet.
Researchers were able to reduce added sucrose by 20 per cent while maintaining the desired sweetness.
"We reasoned that since glucose is considerably sweeter than lactose or galactose, bacteria that release glucose into the product could allow for a reduction in of added sugar while maintaining the desired sweetness in the yogurt," he said.
The findings were published in the journal Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
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