Abstract

Biogenic amines (BAs) are molecules, which can be present in foods and, due to their toxicity, can cause adverse effects on the consumers. BAs are generally produced by microbial decarboxylation of amino acids in food products. The most significant BAs occurring in foods are histamine, tyramine, putrescine, cadaverine, tryptamine, 2-phenylethylamine, spermine, spermidine, and agmatine. The importance of preventing the excessive accumulation of BAs in foods is related to their impact on human health and food quality. Quality criteria in connection with the presence of BAs in food and food products are necessary from a toxicological point of view. This is particularly important in fermented foods in which the massive microbial proliferation required for obtaining specific products is often relater with BAs accumulation. In this review, up-to-date information and recent discoveries about technological factors affecting BA content in foods are reviewed. Specifically, BA forming-microorganism and decarboxylation activity, genetic and metabolic organization of decarboxylases, risk associated to BAs (histamine, tyramine toxicity, and other BAs), environmental factors influencing BA formation (temperature, salt concentration, and pH). In addition, the technological factors for controlling BA production (use of starter culture, technological additives, effects of packaging, other non-thermal treatments, metabolizing BA by microorganisms, effects of pressure treatments on BA formation and antimicrobial substances) are addressed.

Highlights

  • Biogenic amines (BAs) are organic bases, which can be present in foods and can cause several adverse reaction in the consumers

  • The tyramine production of different strains of E. faecalis and E. faecium was studied in buffered systems containing tyrosine; the results indicated that E. faecalis partially reduced its tyraminogenic potential of cells passing from 0 to 5% of NaCl but the decarboxylation activity did not change significantly increasing NaCl concentration up to 15%

  • The reviews of Shalaby (1996) and Silla Santos (1996) had the merit to collect the fragmented information about this issue and were the starting point for a drastic multiplication of scientific publications regarding the presence of BA in food products and the elucidation of the metabolic and genetic drivers of their production by microorganisms

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Biogenic amines (BAs) are organic bases, which can be present in foods and can cause several adverse reaction in the consumers They are produced by microorganisms (mainly bacteria) through the action of decarboxylases (carboxy-lyases EC number 4.1.1.1.), which act selectively on specific amino acids in which they remove the carboxyl group with the formation of the correspondent amine and CO2. In relation to their amounts and their toxicological effects, the most important BAs in foods are histamine (an heterocyclic amine deriving from histidine), tyramine and 2-phenylethylamine (deriving from the aromatic amino acids tyrosine and phenylalanine, respectively), tryptamine. It highlights the strategies available to reduce the BA accumulation in food products

BIOGENIC AMINE TOXICITY AND DECARBOXYLATING MICROORGANISMS IN FOOD
Risk Associated to Biogenic Amines in Food
Main Microbial Groups Involved in BA Production in Foods
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS INFLUENCING BIOGENIC AMINE FORMATION
Salt Concentration
Use of Starter Culture
Technological Additives
Effects of Packaging on Biogenic Amine Formation
Microorganisms Able to Metabolize Biogenic Amine
Effects of Pressure Treatments on BA Formation
Antimicrobial Substances
Findings
CONCLUSION
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