What is Histamine?

By. Fajar - 30 Sep 2025

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What is Histamine?

Kelolalaut.com Histamine is a biogenic amine – a natural compound formed when bacteria break down the amino acid histidine (abundant in fish). It acts as a chemical messenger in the human body, but in food it can be dangerous if consumed in high amounts.

How is Histamine Produced in Fish?

  • Certain bacteria (e.g., Morganella morganii, Klebsiella, Hafnia, Enterobacter) convert histidine → histamine.
  • Happens when fish are stored at unsafe temperatures after being caught.
  • Common in scombroid fish (tuna, mackerel, sardine, anchovy) → condition often called scombroid poisoning.

Histamine Poisoning (Scombroid Poisoning)
Symptoms appear quickly (minutes to hours after eating contaminated fish):

  • Flushing of skin, rash
  • Headache, dizziness
  • Burning/tingling in mouth
  • Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
  • In severe cases: low blood pressure, breathing difficulties

Safe vs Dangerous Levels

  • Safe: Below 50 mg/kg of fish flesh (generally harmless).
  • Suspicious: 50–200 mg/kg.
  • Toxic/Dangerous: Above 200 mg/kg → can cause poisoning.

(EU & FDA regulations usually set 100 mg/kg as the maximum acceptable limit in fish products.)

How to Prevent Histamine Formation

  • Rapid chilling: Ice fish immediately after catch (≤4°C).
  • Proper storage: Keep cold chain unbroken from catch to processing.
  • Hygienic handling: Reduce bacterial contamination.
  • Testing: Use rapid test kits or HPLC methods in fish processing industries.

Key Point: Histamine is not destroyed by cooking, smoking, or canning → prevention must happen before spoilage, not after.

1. Biological Reaction of Histamine in the Body

Histamine works by binding to specific receptors on cells → triggering different reactions depending on receptor type.

Histamine Receptor Reactions

  • H1 receptor
    • Location: Smooth muscle, endothelium, CNS.
    • Reaction: Allergic symptoms → vasodilation, itching, swelling, bronchoconstriction (asthma-like symptoms).
  • H2 receptor
    • Location: Stomach lining, heart.
    • Reaction: Increases gastric acid secretion, faster heart rate.
  • H3 receptor
    • Location: Nervous system.
    • Reaction: Controls release of neurotransmitters (histamine, dopamine, norepinephrine).
  • H4 receptor
    • Location: Bone marrow, white blood cells.
    • Reaction: Regulates inflammation & immune cell movement.

That’s why histamine is linked to allergies, stomach acid, inflammation, and even brain activity.

2. Chemical Reaction of Histamine Formation

  • Histamine is produced from the amino acid histidine.
  • Enzyme: Histidine decarboxylase.
  • Reaction: The chemical reaction of histamine formation is the decarboxylation of the amino acid L-histidine, a one-step process catalyzed by the enzyme L-histidine decarboxylase (HDC). This reaction involves the removal of a carboxyl group (-COOH) from histidine, which is released as carbon dioxide

This reaction is what happens in bacteria-contaminated fish or inside the human body (mast cells & basophils).

3. Immune Reaction (Allergic Response)

  • Allergen (e.g., pollen, food, fish toxin) triggers mast cells.
  • Mast cells release histamine.
  • Histamine binds to receptors → causes redness, itching, swelling, mucus, stomach upset, or even anaphylaxis.
  • In food → histamine forms by bacterial action on histidine.
  • In the body → histamine is released by immune cells, causing allergy & inflammation reactions.

Fish Species Most at Risk

Histamine is most common in dark-meat fish from the Scombridae and Scomberesocidae families:

  • Tuna
  • Mackerel
  • Sardine
  • Anchovy
  • Bonito
  • Herring

How Histamine Forms in Fish

  • Catch → Fish not chilled immediately.
  • Bacteria multiply (e.g., Morganella, Klebsiella, Enterobacter).
  • Bacteria use the enzyme histidine decarboxylase.
  • Histidine → Histamine builds up in flesh.

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