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Research unit
FSVO
Project number
4.16.02
Project title
Reduction of tyramine in fermented foods

Texts for this project

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Key words
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Short description
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Abstract
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Publications / Results
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Inserted texts


CategoryText
Key words
(German)

Biogene Amine, Tyramin-Reduktion, Käse, Salami, Gesundheitsgefährdung, Enterokokken,

Key words
(English)

Biogenic amines, tyramine reduction, cheese, salami, healthrisk, enterococci

Short description
(German)

Tyramin, ein biogenes Amin (BA) mit Gesundheitsrisiko, kommt oft in fermentierten Lebensmitteln wie Käse oder Trockenwürsten (Typ Salami) vor, weil endogne Mikroorganismen (MO) Tyrosin zu Tyramin decarboxylieren. Dieses Projekt hat folgende Ziele (1) Identifizierung von Tyramin-produzierenden MO in solchen Lebensmitteln und die vermutete Hauptrolle von Enterokokken zu klären; (2) Wissensgewinn zu Bedingungen und Mechanismen der Tyramin-Produktion in verantwortlichen MO und in Lebensmitteln; (3) in vitro screening von antagonistischen Lactobacillus Stämmen oder anderen MO, die Tyramin abbauen können; (4) Zusammenstellung einer Synthese anhand unserer Daten und solcher anderer Gruppen, welche den CH-Lebenmittel-Sicherheitsbehörden ermöglichen, Entscheidungen zu treffen bezüglich Massnahmen oder Empfehlungen zur Senkung des Tyramin-Gehalts in fermentierten Lebensmitteln oder sogar Grenzwerte für BA in Lebensmitteln vorzuschlagen. Das übergeordnete Endziel des Projektes ist ein Beitrag für zukünftige fermentierte Lebensmittel mit tiefem Tyramingehalt.

Short description
(English)
Tyramine belonging to the biogenic amines (BA) can often be detected in fermented food such as cheese and dry sausages (salami-type) due to endogenous tyrosine decarboxylating microorganisms (MO) and represent a consumer health-risk to be reduced in future. This project aims (1) to identify major tyramine producing MO in such foodstuffs and identify the most health risky ones on the CH-market and to proof or neglect enterococci as main tyramine producers; (2) to improve knowledge on the mechanisms of tyramine production in MO and in fermented food; (3) to screen in vitro antagonistic Lactobacillus strains against tyramine producers or alternatively MO for tyramine degradation and (4) to deliver a synthesis of our data and data from others which enable Swiss Food Safety authorities to propose measures and recommendations for tyramine reduction or even BA concentration limits in food. The final summarizing goal of the project is a contribution for low-tyramine containing fermented food of the future.
Project aims
(English)

BA such as histamine and tyramine, a BA for longtime neglected in food research, can be found in fermented milk and meat products due to microbial decarboxylation activities. However, the identification of responsible MO, the regulation of tyrosine decarboxylation and dependence from food intrinsic factors, tyramine concentrations in these foods, tyramine and total BA exposure of consumers and the toxicity itself are not clearly identified which would facilitate EFSA and Swiss authorities to define limit concentrations for BA in food. The final objective of this project is to generate knowledge to be applied for tyramine reduction in Swiss cheese and fermented meat. The specific objectives are

A) to identify dominant tyramine producing MO in fermented food from Swiss market or directly producers with high tyramine concentrations such as different cheeses and fermented salami-type meat and to verify or neglect the hypothesis that Enterococcus spp. are the relevant tyramine producers in cheese or whether other MO contribute to the tyramine production in cheese and fermented sausages.

B) to characterize mechanisms of tyramine production in responsible dominant MO, with Enterococcus isolates as model MO, also under food processing and storage conditions leading to high tyramine contents

C) to search for lactic acid bacteria supplying tyramine-degrading capacity, elucidation of the mechanisms, especially tyramine catabolic proteins

D) to deliver a synthesis of our data and data from others which enable Swiss Food Safety authorities to propose measures and recommendations for tyramine reduction or even concentration limits in food

Abstract
(English)
Related documents
Publications / Results
(English)
Role of the microbial community in production of biogenic amines in fermented foods and characterisation of a tyramine-reducing Lactobacillus plantarum strain - Research Collection (ethz.ch)

2020-05_Anderegg J_Chimia (Aarau)_74_391-397_Effects of Sodium Chloride on Tyramine Production...pdf

Anderegg J, Constancias F, Meile L.: Effects of Sodium Chloride on Tyramine Production in a Fermented Food Model and its Inhibition by Tyrosine-degrading Lactobacillus plantarum JA-1199. Chimia (Aarau). 2020 May 27;74(5):391-397.
https://doi.org/10.2533/chimia.2020.391

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32482216

2020-09-01_Anderegg J_J Food Prot_83_1512-1519_Detection of Biogenic Amines and Tyramine-Producing Bacteria...pdf

Anderegg J, Fischer M, Dürig J, Die A, Lacroix C, Meile L. Detection of Biogenic Amines and Tyramine-Producing Bacteria in Fermented Sausages from Switzerland.
J Food Prot. 2020 Sep 1;83(9):1512-1519.

https://doi.org/10.4315/jfp-19-468

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32338740

URL-addresses
(German)