Histamine production in Lactobacillus vaginalis improves cell survival at low pH by counteracting the acidification of the cytosol

2020 
Abstract Histamine, one of the most toxic and commonly encountered biogenic amines (BA) in food, is produced by the microbial decarboxylation of histidine. It may accumulate at high concentrations in fish and fermented food. Cheese has some of the highest histamine concentrations, the result of the histidine-decarboxylase activity of certain lactic acid bacteria (LAB). The present work describes the nucleotide sequence and transcriptional organization of the gene cluster responsible for histamine biosynthesis (the HDC cluster) in Lactobacillus vaginalis IPLA 11064 isolated from cheese. The influence of histidine availability and pH on histamine production and the expression of the HDC cluster genes is also examined. As expected, the results suggest that the production of histamine under acidic conditions improves cell survival by maintaining the cytosol at an appropriate pH. However, the transcriptional regulation of the HDC cluster is quite different from that described in other dairy histamine-producing LAB, probably due to the lack of a termination-antitermination system in the histidyl-tRNA synthetase gene (hisS).
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