A. Lonvaudfunel et A. Joyeux, HISTAMINE PRODUCTION BY WINE LACTIC-ACID BACTERIA - ISOLATION OF A HISTAMINE-PRODUCING STRAIN OF LEUCONOSTOC-OENOS, Journal of Applied Bacteriology, 77(4), 1994, pp. 401-407
Populations of Leuconostoc oenos were harvested from wines containing
a relatively high concentration of biogenic amines. Cultivation of the
biomass in synthetic media and wine showed that it consisted of hista
mine-producing strains. Histamine levels after culture depended on the
quantity of precursor available and on the presence of yeast lees, wh
ich certainly enriched the medium in histidine. Ethanol and pH, which
control bacterial growth rate and total population, were also signific
ant factors: pH and low ethanol concentration enhanced histamine produ
ction. Strain Leuc. oenos 9204 was isolated and studied since it retai
ned its ability to produce histamine after several transfers. In synth
etic medium this strain produced large amounts of histamine especially
in the poorest nutritional conditions (no glucose, no L-malic acid).
These results clearly demonstrate that Leuc. oenos involved in wine-ma
king might play a role in biogenic amine production. The vinification
method might also influence the final amine concentration in wine.