| Literature DB >> 35327210 |
Maria Schirone1, Luigi Esposito1, Federica D'Onofrio1, Pierina Visciano1, Maria Martuscelli1, Dino Mastrocola1, Antonello Paparella1.
Abstract
Biogenic amines (BAs) can be found in a wide range of meat and meat products, where they are important as an index for product stability and quality, but also for their impact on public health. This review analyzes the scientific evidence gathered so far on the presence and role of biogenic amines in meat and meat products, also considering the effect of technological conditions on BAs accumulation or decrease. The data provided can be useful for developing solutions to control BAs formation during the shelf-life, for example by novel starters for dry cured products, as well as by packaging technologies and materials for fresh meats. Further research, whose trends are reviewed in this paper, will fill the knowledge gaps, and allow us to protect such perishable products along the distribution chain and in the home environment.Entities:
Keywords: biogenic amines; histamine; meat; meat processing; shelf-life; tyramine
Year: 2022 PMID: 35327210 PMCID: PMC8947279 DOI: 10.3390/foods11060788
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Scheme of biogenic amines formation. Legend: Hstd = Histidine; Trsn = Tyrosine; Trpt = Tryptophan; Lys = Lysine; Arg = Arginine; Glu = Glutamine; Orn = Ornithine.
Biogenic amines levels in different meat and meat products reported in some studies from the literature.
| Category | Biogenic Amines (mg/kg) | Reference | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PUT | CAD | HIS | SPD | SPM | TYR | PHE | TRYP | |||
| Raw meat | Beef | 6.6–90.9 | <0.5–295.6 | <0.5 | 11.1–65.5 | Rosinská and Lehotay, 2014 [ | ||||
| Pork | 12.7–131.5 | 13.6–440.2 | <0.5 | 34.4–55.2 | ||||||
| Poultry | <0.5–382.7 | <0.5–764.2 | <0.5–180.5 | <0.5–171.2 | ||||||
| Beef | tr-1.9 | nd-1.9 | 0.3–1.8 | 0.2–4.1 | 0.2–3.9 | 0.1–0.5 | Jasim and Sdkhan, 2015 [ | |||
| Beef liver | 1.5–26.1 | nd-42.1 | tr-136.7 | 5.0–10.4 | 4.6–12.5 | Eldaly et al., 2016 [ | ||||
| Different kinds of meat * | nq-124.0 | nq-124.0 | nq-55.0 | nq-229.0 | nq-261.0 | nq-199.0 | Molognoni et al., 2018 [ | |||
| Pork leg | 0.6–14.6 | nd-16.2 | nd | 2.6–3.9 | 25.2–27.6 | 0.7–16.6 | nd-1.7 | nd-6.6 | Triki et al., 2018 [ | |
| Lamb leg | 1.2–10.1 | nd-5.1 | nd | 8.1–12.0 | 31.4–40.9 | 0.1–10.7 | 0.8–9.1 | nd | ||
| Turkey leg | 1.2–68.7 | nd-13.3 | nd | 7.3–18.3 | 32.6–49.2 | nd-6.9 | 0.2–15.1 | nd | ||
| Chicken breast | 1.2–52.0 | nd-14.3 | 0.5–2.1 | 6.2–9.8 | 41.9–53.6 | nd-35.2 | nd-16.9 | 0.4–15.8 | ||
| Beef leg | 1.3–7.4 | nd | nd-0.5 | 2.3–5.4 | 25.1–33.0 | 0.3–1.6 | 0.5–2.6 | nd | ||
| Camel and offals | 0.4–0.8 | 0.2–0.7 | nd-0.3 | 0.1–0.5 | 0.2–0.6 | Tang et al., 2019 [ | ||||
| Chicken breast muscle | 1.0–1.8 | <LOQ-10.5 | 1.4–4.3 | <LOQ-4.2 | Wojnowski et al., 2019 [ | |||||
| Imported meat ** | 1.2–3.0 | nd-4.3 | 0.6–1.4 | 1.6–6.3 | 2.6–11.1 | 0.3–2.0 | nd-0.1 | tr | Algahtani et al., 2020 [ | |
| Broiler chicken (breast and thigh) | tr | tr | 0.1–0.4 | tr-0.6 | tr | Saewan et al., 2021 [ | ||||
| Minced beef | 4.0–60.1 | 26.0–116.2 | 27.2–90.1 | nd-60.4 | Mahmoud et al., 2021 [ | |||||
| Pork belly | 0.6–63.3 | 0–98.3 | 0–1.5 | 3.0–3.5 | 5.2–76.7 | Cho et al., 2021 [ | ||||
| Pork belly, marinated | 0.4–21.1 | 0–58.3 | 0–1.1 | 3.1–3.5 | 5.2–68.1 | |||||
| Processed meat products | Fermented sausages | 0–505.0 | 0–690.0 | 0–515.0 | 0–510.0 | Papavergou et al., 2012 [ | ||||
| Dry fermented meat | nd-225.1 | nd-16.8 | nd-151.8 | nd-228.1 | nd-42.7 | Buňka et al., 2012 [ | ||||
| Greek sausages | 0–491.7 | 0–1014.1 | 0–375.8 | 1.5–19.5 | 13.4–60.1 | 3.7–381.4 | 0–56.4 | 0–60.5 | Papavergou, 2011 [ | |
| North European sausages | 0.4–229.0 | nd-246.8 | nd-131.0 | 1.0–6.6 | nd-12.0 | 1.3–302.9 | nd-54.4 | nd-109.7 | De Mey et al., 2014 [ | |
| South European sausages | 0.3–316.4 | nd-641.4 | nd-131.0 | nd-13.3 | nd-21.1 | nd-410.8 | nd-57.1 | nd-109.7 | ||
| Fermented sausages | nd-564.5 | 9.9–654.7 | nd-177.4 | 100.6–328.6 | 19.2–502.8 | nd-4.3 | nd-32.8 | Xie et al., 2015 [ | ||
| Fermented beef sausages | 1.0–15.8 | 0.5–9.0 | 0.3–19.6 | nd-103.3 | 96.4–364.1 | 64.1–275.1 | nd-16.1 | nd-32.8 | Çiçek, 2016 [ | |
| Chinese Sichuan-style sausages | 19.1–376.5 | 114.0–327.4 | 88.8–285.9 | Sun et al., 2016 [ | ||||||
| Portuguese sausages | 11.6–265.4 | nd-364.8 | nd-28.9 | nd-11.5 | nd-41.0 | nd-150.3 | nd-38.6 | nd-67.1 | Laranjo et al., 2017 [ | |
| Belgian sausages | 0.3–316.0 | 0–641.0 | 0–131.0 | 0–411.0 | Lorenzo et al., 2017 [ | |||||
| Turkish style sausages | 1.0–24.6 | 72.2–320.0 | 5.2–99.9 | 34.4–68.7 | 2.7–20.0 | 69.4–162.4 | 2.3–7.6 | 20.0–40.9 | Ekici and Omer, 2018 [ | |
| Dry-fermented sausages | nd-212.0 | nd-30.8 | nd-9.7 | nd-147.0 | nd-36.0 | nd | Ikonic et al., 2019 [ | |||
| Chinese sausages | nd-277.1 | nd-670.9 | nd-209.6 | 2.4–23.5 | 7.5–36.5 | nd-209.6 | nd-8.2 | nd-22.5 | Li et al., 2019 [ | |
| Brazilian commercial salamis | 91.5–818.5 | 37.9–166.4 | nd-500.2 | 51.2–55.8 | 96.7–151.9 | 91.3–346.9 | nd-375.9 | nd-123.9 | Roselino et al., 2020 [ | |
| Italian commercial salamis | nd-381.2 | nd-215.9 | nd-240.9 | nd-99.7 | 102.8–141.2 | nd-270.0 | nd-316.4 | nd-297.1 | ||
| Mortadella di Campotosto | nd-186.8 | nd-15.0 | nd-17.0 | 40.4–79.4 | 51.3–235.9 | Serio et al., 2020 [ | ||||
Legend: PUT = Putrescine; CAD = Cadaverine; HIS = Histamine; SPD = Spermidine; SPM = Spermine; TYR = Tyramine; PHE = Phenylethylamine; TRYP = Tryptamine; nd = not detected; tr = traces; nq = not quantified; * = cooked sausages, mortadella, cooked ham, bacon, corned beef, beef jerky, canned/pouch roast/shredded beef, salami and raw sausages; ** = luncheon, hot dog, corned beef and minced meat.