Assessment of biogenic amine production by lactic acid bacteria isolated from Serbian traditionally fermented foods

Authors

  • Slavica Vesković-Moračanin Institute of Meat Hygiene and Technology, Kaćanskog 13, Belgrade, Serbia
  • Srđan Stefanović Institute of Meat Hygiene and Technology, Kaćanskog 13, Belgrade, Serbia
  • Branka Borović Institute of Meat Hygiene and Technology, Kaćanskog 13, Belgrade, Serbia
  • Ivan Nastasijević Institute of Meat Hygiene and Technology, Kaćanskog 13, Belgrade, Serbia
  • Milan Milijašević Institute of Meat Hygiene and Technology, Kaćanskog 13, Belgrade, Serbia
  • Monika Stojanova Faculty of Agriculture, University of Belgrade, Nemanjina 6, Zemun-Belgrade 11080, Serbia
  • Dragutin Đukić Faculty of Agronomy in Čačak, University of Kragujevac, Cara Dušana 34, 32000 Čačak, Serbia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5937/

Keywords:

biogenic amines, lactic acid bacteria, Serbian traditional fermented food, liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry

Abstract

The aim of this study was to monitor the production of biogenic amines by 156 selected lactic acid bacteria (LAB) strains isolated from Serbian traditionally fermented sausages and cheeses. The method for the determination of biogenic amines is liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The measured concentrations of putrescine, cadaverine, tryptamine and spermidine (except in 13 LAB strains) were below the detection limit of the analytical method (0.1 mg/L), whereas those of histamine, tyramine and spermine were above the limit of detection, but still not significant. Tyramine was the only amine that had a measured concentration of 59.89 ± 0.06 mg L-1. Most of the tested LAB strains produced tyramine in broth below 26 mg L-1 with the exception of Enterococcus faecalis strains (59.89 ± 6.66 mg L-1) and Enterococcus faecium strains (47.33 ± 8.58 mg L-1). The low concentrations of biogenic amines are considered non-significant from both a technological and safety point of view

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Published

06.02.2026

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Articles