A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Assessing the toxic potential of enteropathogenic Bacillus cereus




AuthorsJessberger N, Kranzler M, Da Riol C, Schwenk V, Buchacher T, Dietrich R, Ehling-Schulz M, Martlbauer E

PublisherACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD

Publication year2019

JournalFood Microbiology

Journal name in sourceFOOD MICROBIOLOGY

Journal acronymFOOD MICROBIOL

Article numberUNSP 103276

Volume84

Number of pages12

ISSN0740-0020

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2019.103276

Web address https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fm.2019.103276


Abstract
The diarrheal type of food poisoning caused by enteropathogenic Bacillus cereus has been linked to various exotoxins. Best described are the non-hemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe), hemolysin BL (Hbl), and cytotoxin K (CytK). Due to the ubiquitous prevalence of B. cereus in soil and crops and its ability to form highly resistant endospores, contaminations during food production and processing cannot be completely avoided. Although phylogenetically closely related, enteropathogenic B. cereus strains show a high versatility of their toxic potential. Thus, functional tools for evaluating the pathogenic potential are urgently needed in order to predict hazardous food contaminations. As the diarrheal syndrome is the result of a toxico-infection with enterotoxin production in the intestine, the entire passage of the bacteria within the host, from spore survival in the stomach, spore germination, host cell adherence, and motility, to enterotoxin production under simulated intestinal conditions was compared in a panel of 20 strains, including high pathogenic as well as apathogenic ones. This approach resulted in an overarching virulence analysis scheme. In parallel, we searched for potential toxico-specific secreted markers to discriminate low and high pathogenic strains. To this end, we targeted known exotoxins using an easy to implement immunoblotting approach as well as a caseinolytic exoprotease activity assay. Overall, Nhe component B, sphingomyelinase, and exoproteases showed good correlation with the complex virulence analysis scheme and can serve as a template for future fast and easy risk assessment tools to be implemented in routine diagnostic procedures and HACCP studies.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 11:50