| Literature DB >> 18678425 |
Jae-Hyung Mah1, Young-Hyo Chang, Han-Joon Hwang.
Abstract
A bacterial strain H3029, a gram-positive, rod-shaped, oxidase-negative, endospore-forming bacterium that characteristically produces tyramine from tyrosine, was isolated from a Myeolchi-jeotgal, a traditional Korean salted and fermented anchovy (Engraulis japonicus). The H3029 strain showed a high ability to produce 4140 microg/ml of tyramine from the culture broth containing 5000 microg/ml tyrosine. On the other hand, the strain produced a relatively low level of other putrefactive amines, at 973 microg/ml of putrescine and 147 microg/ml of cadaverine from the media, with each 5000 microg/ml of ornithine hydrochloride and lysine hydrochloride. The H3029 strain produced no detectable level of histamine (detection limit of 4 microg/ml) from the media containing 5000 microg/ml of histidine hydrochloride. Meanwhile, tyramine, the main product of the strain, showed the antimicrobial activity at the level of over 1 mg/disk against Staphylococcus aureus by agar diffusion test, and the mutagenicity in Ames test at 0.1 mg/plate using Salmonella typhimurium TA98 and TA1535. On the basis of the polyphasic taxonomic study, the H3029(T) strain was assigned a novel species of the genus Paenibacillus as Paenibacillus tyraminigenes sp. nov. The type strain of which is strain H3029(T) (=KCTC 10694BP(T)).Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18678425 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2008.07.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Food Microbiol ISSN: 0168-1605 Impact factor: 5.277