Title: BACILLUS CEREUS
1BACILLUS CEREUS
2Content
- INTRODUCTION
- OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
- SPORE AND GERMINATION
- ISOLATION AND ENUMERATION
- TYPING
- CONTROL
- VIRULENCE FACTORS
- Syndromes of B. cereus Food Poisoning
- Phospholipase and Sphingomyelinase
- Cereolysin
- Haemolysin BL
- Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- Enterotoxin T
- Cytotoxin K
- Detection of enterotoxins
- Emetic Toxin
- Bioassays of Enterotoxins and Emetic Toxin
- CONCLUSIONS
3INTRODUCTION
- The Genus Bacillus was established in 1872 with
B. subtilis as type species. B. cereus was added
fifteen years later - Several accounts of food poisoning attributed to
members of the genus Bacillus appeared in the
European literature before 1950
4INTRODUCTION
- An accumulating number of reports implicate both
B. subtilis and B. licheniformis as potential
food poisoning agents. The pattern of their
repeated occurrence in association with episodes
of food poisoning suggests a significant
involvement - However, application of the standard
toxin-testing methods used for B. cereus to
isolates of B. subtilis and B. licheniformis
associated with gastrointestinal illness have so
far failed to indicate what mode of pathogenic
action these organisms might have.
5OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- B. cereus has a wide distribution in nature,
frequently isolated from soil and growing plants,
but it is also well adapted for growth in the
intestinal tract of insects and mammals - It has been isolated from foods that were not
involved in foodborne illness outbreaks. It is
also present in the stools of 14 to 15 of
healthy humans - It is frequently isolated from milk and dairy
products. In milk, B. cereus causes a defect
known as 'bitty' cream or sweet curdling. It is
found in rice, rice products, oriental dishes and
ingredients
6OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- A variety of foods have been implicated in
food-poisoning - Emetic syndrome caused by B. cereus is highly
associated with rice and rice products
7OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- B. cereus was isolated from 9, 35, 14 and 48 of
raw milk, pasteurized milk, Cheddar cheese and
ice cream samples, respectively - In a local study, B. cereus occurred in 17 of
fermented milks, 52 of ice creams, 35 of soft
ice creams, 2 of pasteurized milks and
pasteurized fruit- or nut-flavored reconstituted
milks, and 29 of milk powders, mostly in fruit-
or nut-flavored milk mixes (Wong et al., 1988a). - B. cereus was found in 71.4 and 33.3 in spring
and in autumn samples of full-fat milk in
mainland China, respectively, and the average
count among the positive samples was 11.7 MPN/ml
(Zhou et al., 2008). - Dried milk products and infant food are known to
be frequently contaminated with B. cereus, 261
samples of infant food distributed in 17
countries were collected and 54 were
contaminated with B. cereus reaching levels from
0.3 to 600/g (Becker et al., 1994).
8OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- Chinese 'take-out' foods appear to be
particularly vulnerable to B. cereus infection
and it has been shown that suspensions (2) of
seed flours and meals from diverse botanical
origins were found to be excellent sources of
nutrients for growth (Beuchat and Ma-Lin, 1980)
9OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- Of 433 honey samples collected in Argentina, 27
yielded B. cereus isolates and 14 yielded other
species of Bacillus. - The Argentinian B. cereus isolates were compared
with isolates recovered from honey from other
countries using rep-PCR fingerprinting with
primers BOX, REP and ERIC, restriction fragment
length polymorphism analysis of a 16S rRNA gene
fragment (16S rRNA PCR/RFLP), and morphological
and biochemical tests. - Results showed a high degree of diversity, both
phenotypic and genotypic among the isolates of B.
cereus (Lopez and Alippi, 2007).
10OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- The B. cereus isolates from food are highly
toxigenic. All the isolates from local dairy
products lysed rabbit erythrocytes 98 showed
verotoxicity, 68 showed cytotonic toxicity for
CHO cells (Wong et al., 1988a). - In another study of 136 strains of B. cereus
isolated from milk and cream, 43 and 22 showed
toxicity to human embryonic lung cell when the
isolates were cultured in brain heart infusion
and milk, respectively (Christiansson et al.,
1989). - In milks, B. cereus growed rapidly and produced
cytotonic and cytotoxic toxins (Wong et al.,
1988b). Toxin production of B. cereus in milk at
low temperature was also evaluated (Christiansson
et al., 1989).
11OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- For the B. cereus isolated from seafood, 48
isolates produced both the hemolysin BL (HBL) and
nonhemolytic (NHE) enterotoxins, and 94 and 50
produced NHE or HBL toxins, respectively. - Only one B. cereus isolate possessed the
cereulide synthetase gene, ces (Rahmati and
Labbe, 2008).
12OCCURRENCE IN FOOD AND ENVIRONMENT
- The enterotoxin genes hblA, hblC, hblD, nheA,
nheB and nheC occurred in B. cereus isolates from
full-fat milk products with frequencies of 37.0,
66.3, 71.7, 71.7, 62.0 and 71.7 respectively - Nine B. thuringiensis isolates were also
identified from six pasteurized milk samples, and
most of them harbored six enterotoxic genes and
the insecticidal toxin cry1A gene. - The single B. mycoides isolate harbored nheA and
nheC genes (Zhou et al., 2008).
13CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
- B. cereus is a Gram-positive, motile,
facultative, aerobic sporeformer. - Dimensions of vegetative cells are typically 1.0-
1.2 µm by 3.0-5.0 µm. - The ellipsoidal spores are formed in a central or
paracentral position without swelling the
sporangium. - The organism does not ferment mannitol and has a
very active phospholipase (lecithinase) system.
B. cereus is keyed as citrate(), arabinose (-),
Gram (), aerobic sporeformer.
14CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
15CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
16CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
- The bacilli tend to occur in chains the
stability of the chains determines the form of
the colony, which varies greatly in different
strains. - The GC content of the DNA is reported to be
32-33 moles (determined by Tm) and 33-37 moles
(analysis).
17CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
18CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
- . Phylogenetic analysis shows that the B. cereus
group of bacteria are closely related group (Fig.
1) (Stenfors Arnesen et al., 2008). - Conjugative behavior shows that these Bacillus
species are closely related.
19CHARACTERISTICS AND TAXONOMY
- Plasmids have been identified in B. cereus.
Plasmids of molecular weight ranged from 1.6 to
105 MDa. - Bacteriocin production could be attributed to a
45 MDa plasmid (pBC7), and tetracycline
resistance to a 2.8 MDa plasmid (pBC16)
20SPORE AND GERMINATION
- B. cereus produces elliptical shaped endospore
with dominant central position, no distended
sporangium. - The spore when liberated from the sporangium is
encased in a loose fitting exosporium. - On germination the spore coat undergoes rapid
lysis while the vegetative cell is emerging.
Since spores of B. cereus may survive heat
processing, spore germination is important in B.
cereus study.
21GERMINATION STEPS
- Once the initial 'trigger reaction' has been
activated, germination continues in the absence
of the inducer. - After the 'trigger' steps, the various spore
properties are changed sequentially in the
following order loss of heat resistance, release
of dipicolinic acid (DPA) and Ca2 into the
medium, increase in spore stainability, beginning
of phase darkening and decrease of the optical
density of spore suspension as cortex
peptidoglycan is hydrolyzed and the products
released to the medium - Finally, the onset of metabolic activity as
measured by oxygen uptake.
22Role of trypsin-like enzyme
- The germination of B. cereus spore is partially
prevented by several inhibitors of trypsin-like
enzymes (leupeptin, antipain, and
tosyl-lysine-chloromethyl ketone) - A synthetic substrate of trypsin also inhibited
germination. - A crude extract of germinated B. cereus spores
contained a trypsin-like enzyme whose activity is
sensitive to germination-inhibitory compounds
such as leupeptin, tosyl-arginine-methyl ester,
and tosyl-lysine-chloromethyl ketone. - Spore suspensions exposed to the above inhibitors
under germination conditions lose only part of
their heat resistance and some 10-30 of their
dipicolinic acid content (Boschwitz et al., 1983).
23SPORE AND GERMINATION
- Inactivation of B. cereus spores during cooling
from 90C occurs in two phases, one phase occurs
during cooling from 90 to 80C the second occurs
during cooling from 46 to 38C. - No inactivation occurs when spores are cooled
from a maximum temperature of 80C. - Why?
24SPORE AND GERMINATION
- Germination of B. cereus spores is more
extensive in rice than in trypticase soy broth at
lt15C and is generally more extensive for
diarrheal strains in either medium than emetic
strains - Germination of B. cereus spores was also
inhibited by the growth of lactic acid bacteria
or the organic acids produced (Wong and Chen,
1988).
25SPORE AND GERMINATION
- B. cereus spores germinate in inosine or in
l-alanine as sole germinants - They require both GerI and GerQ germinant
receptors for germination in inosine as the sole
germinant, whereas the GerL receptor is
responsible for most of the response to l-alanine
as the sole germinant, with a smaller
contribution from the GerI receptor
26Confirmation of outbreak
- B. cereus strains of the same serotype should be
present in the epidemiologically food, feces
and/or vomitus of the affected persons. Or - Significant numbers (gt105 CFU/g) of B. cereus of
an established food poisoning serotype should be
isolated from the incriminated food, or feces, or
vomitus of the affected persons. or - Significant numbers (gt105 CFU/g) of B. cereus
should be isolated from the incriminated food,
together with detection of the organism in the
feces and/or vomitus of the affected persons.
27ISOLATION AND ENUMERATION
- Mannitol egg yolk polymyxin agar (MYP) is usually
recommended. - Polymyxin is the selective agent, and egg yolk
and mannitol are differential agents - Typical colonies are rough with a violet-red
background, surrounded by white precipitated egg
yolk.
28ISOLATION AND ENUMERATION
- Polymyxin pyruvate egg yolk mannitol bromothymol
blue agar (PEMBA) is a modified selective agar,
and also contains polymyxin and egg yolk. - Pyruvate is added to reduce the size of colonies.
- The authors state that this medium is superior in
detecting lecithinase-negative strains of B.
cereus, weak and negative egg yolk reacting
strains also developed typical colored colonies,
grey to turquoise blue, and the color turns to a
peacock blue color after 48 h (Holbrook and
Anderson, 1980).
29ISOLATION AND ENUMERATION
- Two new chromogenic plating media (CBC and BCM)
were compared with two standard selective plating
media (PEMBA and MYP) recommended by food
authorities for isolation, identification and
enumeration of B. cereus - authors addressed that the new chromogenic media
represent a good alternative to the conventional
standard media (Fricker et al., 2008).
30SEROTYPING
- Developed at the Food Hygiene Laboratory, England
Based on the established type-specificity of the
flagellar (H) antigen - The scheme currently comprises a 'routine set' of
28 agglutinating antisera raised against
prototype strains - In approximately 90 of outbreaks the causative
serotypes can be established.
31SEROTYPING
- Most of the outbreaks associated with a
vomiting-type syndrome, foods, clinical specimens
or both yielded H-serotype 1 only. But only a few
of diarrheal-type outbreaks yielded serotype 1
only
32PHAGE TYPING
- Phage typing scheme has been developed for B.
cereus. By using 12 bacteriophages, 10 Myoviridae
and 2 Siphoviridae phages isolated from sewage,
were employed (Ahmed et al., 1995).
33TYPING
- Biotypes, fatty acid profiles, and restriction
fragment length polymorphisms of a PCR product
(PCR-RFLPof the cereolysin AB gene) were compared
for 62 isolates of the B. cereus group originated
from various foods. - The isolates were clustered into 6 biotypes, 10
fatty acid groups, or 7 PCR-RFLP clusters and
these schemes may be used in tracking the
origination of B. cereus strains (Schraft et al.,
1996).
34 amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP)
method
- the chromosome DNA is digested by HindIII,
ligated to adapters (ACG GTATGC GAC AG and GAGTGC
CATACGCTGTCTCGA - amplified by PCR using primers
(GGTATGCGACAGAGCTTA, GGTATGCGACAGAGCTTC, G
GTATGCGACAGAGCTTG and GGTATGCGACAGAGCTTT)
(Ripabelli et al., 2000).
35AFLP method
36Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
- Primers were designed for conserved regions of
housekeeping genes, and 330- to 504-bp internal
fragments of seven such genes were sequenced for
all strains. - adk (encoding adenylate kinase), ccpA (catabolite
control protein A) - ftsA (cell division protein)
- glpT (glycerol-3-phosphate permease)
- pyrE (orotate phosphoribosyltransferase)
- recF (DNA replication and repair protein), and
- sucC (succinyl coenzyme A synthetase, beta
subunit)
37Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
- Primers were designed (Table 5) for conserved
regions of housekeeping genes, and 330- to 504-bp
internal fragments of seven such genes, adk
(encoding adenylate kinase), ccpA (catabolite
control protein A), ftsA (cell division protein),
glpT (glycerol-3-phosphate permease), pyrE
(orotate phosphoribosyltransferase), recF (DNA
replication and repair protein), and sucC
(succinyl coenzyme A synthetase, beta subunit)
were sequenced for all strains. The number of
alleles at individual loci ranged from 25 to 40
(Table 6),
38Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
39Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
- The number of alleles at individual loci ranged
from 25 to 40
dN/dS ratio nonsynonymous/synonymous
substitution rate ratios
40Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
- a total of 53 allelic profiles or sequence types
(STs) were distinguished
41Multilocus sequence typing (MLST)
- Analysis of the sequence data showed that the
population structure of the B. cereus group is
weakly clonal. - In particular, all five B. anthracis isolates
analyzed had the same ST. - The MLST scheme has a high level of resolution
and should be an excellent tool for studying the
population structure and epidemiology of the B.
cereus group
42MLST
- Phylogenetic analysis was performed on a total of
296 strains for which MLST sequence information
is available (MLST database (http//pubmlst.org/bc
ereus/) - three main lineages--I, II, and III--within the
B. cereus complex were identified - With few exceptions, all food-borne isolates
were in group I.
43MLST
- horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of toxin-encoding
genes among various strains determined
44CONTROL
- Heated B. cereus did not grow at 10 and 50C or in
a medium with pH 4.0. - Decreasing pH values and increasing levels of
sodium chloride decreased growth rate and
increased the lag phase of B. cereus. - pH 4.5 was unable to prevent the growth of heated
spores in a meat substrate with 0.5 NaCl at 12C.
- The combination of pH lt/4.5, NaCl concentration
gt/1.0 and temperatures lt/12C was sufficient to
inhibit B. cereus growth after heat treatment at
90 C for 10 min, for at least 50 days in nutrient
broth and in meat extract (Martinez et al., 2007).
45CONTROL
- The combination of mild acidification (pH 5.0)
and refrigeration (lt/8C) inhibited B. cereus
growth for at least 60 days in vegetable
substrates. - Psychrotrophic strains of B. cereus were
inhibited in carrot broth by heating at 90 C for
7.5 min, if the broth was refrigerated at a
temperature of 8 C or lower. - If the vegetable product was exposed to
temperatures of mild abuse (12 C), it was
necessary to implement a more drastic heat
treatment (90 C for 30 min) (Valero et al., 2003).
46CONTROL
- A combination of electrolyzed water and 1 citric
acid exhibits synergistic effect on the
inactivation of B. cereus vegetative cells and
spores (Park et al., 2009). - Growth and germination of B. cereus are inhibited
by lactic acid bacteria and the organic acids
produced by these bacteria, e.g. acetate,
formate, and lactate. Spores of B. cereus are
more resistant to these organic acids (Wong and
Chen, 1988).
47CONTROL
- A combination of electrolyzed water and 1 citric
acid - peracetic acid-based disinfectant
- ozone
- Pulsed Electric Field (PEF) technology
- High pressure around 300 MPa
- Several antimicrobial wine recipes, each
consisting of red or white wine extracts of
oregano leaves with added garlic juice and
oregano oil are bactericidal
48Essences of vegetables
- Carvacrol, a natural antimicrobial compound
present in the essential oil fraction of oregano
(???)and thyme(???)
49bacteriocin
- enterocin AS-48 ( 20-35 µg/ml )against the
toxicogenic psychrotrophic strain B. cereus - Enterotoxin production at 37C was also inhibited.
- Heat sensitivity of endospores increased markedly
in food samples supplemented with enterocin AS-48
(Grande et al., 2006) - Synergistic activity of epsilon-poly-L-lysine and
nisin A
50 VIRULENCE
- In addition to causing foodborne illness, B.
cereus is also capable of causing mastitis,
systemic infection, gangrene, meningitis in
immunocompromised children (Gaur et al., 2001),
respiratory tract infections (Gray et al., 1999),
and other clinical problems (Weber, 1988).
51VIRULENCE
- Usually, two types of B. cereus foodborne
diseases occur, the diarrhoeal and the emetic
types
52Cell culture assays
- Cell culture assays measuring the cytotoxic
activity of cell-free culture supernatants is now
more commonly used to detect the presence of B.
cereus diarrheal toxins, and these give a good
indication of the cytotoxic potential of B.
cereus strains.
53 VIRULENCE FACTORS
- B. cereus produces a large number of secreted
cytotoxins and enzymes that may contribute to
diarrhoeal disease - the identity of the enterotoxin(s) is still a
controversial topic - The three cytotoxins are currently considered the
aetiological agents of B. cereus diarrhoeal
foodborne disease - haemolysin BL (Hbl)
- nonhaemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe)
- cytotoxin K.
- Hbl and Nhe are related three-component toxins,
while the single-component CytK belongs to the
family of b-barrel pore-forming toxins.
54 VIRULENCE FACTORS
- In addition, several other protein cytotoxins,
haemolysins and degradative enzymes have been
described that may potentially contribute to the
pathogenicity of B. cereus diarrhoeal disease. - These include cereolysin O, haemolysin II,
haemolysin III, InhA2 (metalloprotease) and three
phospholipases C
55Phospholipase and Sphingomyelinase
- Phospholipase and Sphingomyelinase were known to
be toxic, but now they have been demonstrated to
be nontoxic, and some of the hemolysins
associated with them are marginally toxic
(Beecher et al., 2000)
56Phospholipase
- Phospholipase (Lecithinase)
- similar to the a-toxin of Clostridium
perfringens. - Phospholipase of B. cereus is resistant to
inactivation at 45C and also resistant to trypsin
inactivation. - It is a small metalloprotein (MW 23,000 Da)
containing two zinc atoms per molecule of enzyme
(El-sayed and Roberts, 1983). - Phospholipase activity can be determined by
observing zones of turbidity on agar plate
containing 1 egg yolk. - Production of phospholipase is regulated under
the transcriptional regulator, PlcR, which
controls proteins, of which 22 were secreted in
the extracellular medium and 18 were bound or
attached to cell wall structures (membrane or
peptidoglycan layer). - These regulated proteins are related to food
supply (phospholipases, proteases, toxins), cell
protection (bacteriocins, toxins, transporters,
cell wall biogenesis) and environment-sensing
(Gohar et al., 2008)
57Sphingomyelinase
- It is a protein of between 41,000 and 23,300 Da,
depending on the method of analysis used - requires divalent cations for activity
- can be assayed as follows culture filtrate is
mixed with phosphate-buffered saline and
TNPAL-sphingomyelin solution (N-w- trinitrophenyl
aminolauryl sphingosyl phosphoryl choline).
58Cereolysin
- purified to apparent homogeneity by using
ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydrophobic
chromatography with AH-Sepharose, isoelectric
focusing, and gel filtration. - The active form of the toxin had an isoelectric
point (pI) of 6.6, and the molecular weight of
55,000 - Cereolysin is a cholesterol-dependant cytolysins,
containing two half-cystine residues. - In the absence of dithriothreitol, partial
spontaneous oxidation resulted in the formation
of an oxidized form of the toxin. - cereolysin is a thiol- or SH-activated hemolysin
(cytolysins) similar to the streptolysin O
(produced by Streptococcus pyogenes), pneumolysin
(Streptococcus pneumoniae), and listeriolysin
(Listeria monocytogenes). They are apparently
cross-react in neutralization and immunodiffusion
tests. They are activated by thiol-reducing
agents
59 Haemolysin BL
- HBL is a tripartite toxin produced by B. cereus,
and it has been highly purified and established
to be a diarrheal toxin by the ligated rabbit
ileal loop assay. - HBL is identical to the toxin purified (Thompson
et al., 1984) by performing Western blots and
immunodiffusion assays
60 Haemolysin BL
- The B. cereus enterotoxin is capable of causing
fluid accumulation in ligated rabbit ileal loops,
altering the vascular permeability or rabbit and
guinea-pig skin and killing mice when injected
intravenously - The enterotoxin is synthesized and released
during the late logarithmic growth phase of the
organism at an optimum temperature of 32-37C.
61 Haemolysin BL
- The growth medium employed markedly affected the
ability of a given strain of B. cereus to provoke
a response. Brain Heart Infusion broth proved to
be best for toxin production in small scale - CA medium consisting of casamino acids, yeast
extract and minerals supplemented with 1 glucose
was shown to be optimum for fermenter production
of B. cereus enterotoxin at 32C, controlled pH
8.0, and moderate stirring rate
62 Haemolysin BL
- The enterotoxin is thermolabile and susceptible
to protease inactivation - Activity of enterotoxin may involve stimulation
of adenylate cyclase-cAMP system with probable
role in non-gastrointestinal infections
63Haemolysin BL
- HBL is a unique and potent three component pore
forming toxin composed of a binding component, B,
and two lytic components, L(1) and L(2). - Nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences have
been reported for all components (GenBank
accession nos. L20441, U63928, AJ237785). - The genes hblC (L2), hblD (L1), and hblA (B) are
arranged in tandem in an operon with the promoter
located upstream of hblC.
64Haemolysin BL
- Only Components B and L1 contain predicted
transmembrane segments of 17 and 60 amino acid
residues, respectively - All three components in HBL are required for
biological activity. - HBL produces a unique discontinuous hemolysis
pattern on blood agar. Hemolysis begins several
millimeters from the edge of a colony or a well
containing HBL, forming a ring-shaped clearing
zone (discontinuous).
65Haemolysin BL
- HBL is dermonecrotic, increases vascular
permeability in rabbit skin, and is cytotoxic to
Chinese hamster ovary cells and retinal tissue
both in vitro and in vivo - HBL forms pores in eukaryotic cell membranes,
with each of the components binding the membrane
independently and reversibly - A high degree of molecular heterogeneity exists
in HBL from different strains
66Haemolysin BL
- Commercially available kit (BCET RPLA, Oxoid) is
useful for detection of L(2) component of HBL,
but detection of only one component is
insufficient to give comprehensive view on HBL
toxin producing strains as some strains produced
only one or two of the three HBL components.
67Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- NHE is also a multi-component toxin
68Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- Various combinations of the individual NHE
subunits possess some degree of biological
activity, but maximal activity is achieved only
when all components are present. - N-terminal amino acid sequence similarity exists
between L1 of HBL and the 39 kDa subunit of NHE,
as well as between L2 and the 45 kDa subunit of
NHE, suggesting similar functional roles in
different B. cereus strains.
69Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- Both NheA and NheB appear to be present in
culture supernatants in two forms with slightly
differing sizes, where the smallest form
represents a further processed variant of the
largest form. - The smallest forms of NheA and NheB lack 11 and
12 N-terminal amino acids, respectively, in
addition to the 26 and 30 residues of their
signal peptides
70Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- The nature of the cytotoxic activity of Nhe
towards epithelial cells showed rapid disruption
of the plasma membrane following exposure to Nhe,
and formation of pores in planar lipid bilayers
71Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- Vero cell assay
- A, toxin
- B, control
72Nonhaemolytic enterotoxin
- (A)1.5 human erythrocytes
73Enterotoxin T
- a single component enterotoxin and appears to
possess biological activity similar to HBL and
NHE. - The authors were able to detect the enterotoxin T
gene, bceT, in all ten strains tested by PCR,
including some environmental isolates. - However, no evidence exists that the 41 kDa
enterotoxin T has been involved in any cases of
B. cereus food poisoning.
74Cytotoxin K
- single-component protein toxins that are members
of the family of ß-barrel poreforming toxin - This toxin family includes ß-toxin of Clostridium
perfringens and a-haemolysin of S. aureus - CytK is a 34-kDa protein with dermonecrotic,
cytotoxic and haemolytic activities, and shows
similar cytotoxic potency towards cell cultures
as Hbl and Nhe (Lund et al., 2000)
75Emetic Toxin
- Emetic toxin, cereulide, produced by B. cereus
has been purified - Optimum production occurs in a rice culture
slurry incubated at 25-30C during the stationary
growth phase of the organism -
76Cereulide
- It is a small ring-formed dodecadepsipeptide with
the structure D-O-Leu-D-Ala-D-O-Val-D-Val3 - Its genetic determinant is plasmid-borne
(Ehling-Schulz et al., 2006). - The peptide is 1,165 Da with a predicted pI of
5.52. - Cereulide is hydrophobic and not easily
solubilized in aqueous solutions and may be
delivered to its target cells bound to or
dissolved in carriers found in food (Schoeni and
Wong, 2005).
77Detection of cereulide
- Two animal models, rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta)
and Asian musk shrew (Suncus murinus)(?? ), have
been used for cereulide assays - The HEp-2 vacuolation assay with colorimetric
modifications is commonly used. In this assay,
the mitochondrial swelling caused by cereulide
appears as cytoplasmic vacuoles in HEp-2 cells. - Paralysis of boar spermatozoa and changes in
oxidation rates in isolated rat liver
mitochondria have also been used as indicators of
cereulide-induced toxicity. Measurement of oxygen
consumption in these assays indicates that
cereulide acts by uncoupling mitochondrial
oxidative phosphorylation (Schoeni and Wong,
2005).