Abstract

Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) are naturally found in fermented vegetable products. The ability of 230 kimchi bacterial isolates was investigated to produce tyramine by biochemical and genetic methods. The production of tyramine was determined by thin-layer chromatography (TLC) and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The presence of the gene encoding the corresponding tyrosine decarboxylase was also determined by PCR assay. After the production of tyramine was confirmed by chromatographic and molecular methods, the bacterial isolates producing the amine were identified by 16S rRNA gene sequence and species-specific PCR analyses. Only a small proportion of the bacterial isolates (14/230 isolates) decarboxylated tyrosine in vitro. All of the 14 bacterial isolates that produced tyramine were shown to possess the tdc gene, indicating that a positive correlation existed between the production of tyramine and the presence of the corresponding decarboxylase gene. The 14 isolates included three LAB species and one other species: Lactobacillus brevis (six), Lactobacillus curvatus (four), Leuconostoc mesenteroides (two), and Staphylococcus hominis (two). This study demonstrated that only a small proportion of LAB and other microbiota growing in kimchi had the ability to produce tyramine.

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