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Emetic toxin-producing strains of Bacillus cereus show distinct characteristics within the Bacillus cereus group

  • Frederic Carlin
  • , Martina Fricker
  • , Annemarie Pielaat
  • , Simon Heisterkamp
  • , Ranad Shaheen
  • , Mirja Salkinoja-Salonen
  • , Birgitta Svensson
  • , Christophe Ngyen-the
  • , Monika Ehling-Schulz

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

(RAPD and FT-IR) to investigate if emetic toxin-producing hazardous B. cereus strains possess characteristic growth and heat resistance profiles. The strains were classified into three groups: emetic toxin (cereulide)-producing strains (n=17), strains connected to diarrheal foodbome outbreaks (n=40) and food-environment strains (n=43), these latter not producing the emetic toxin. Our study revealed a shift in growth limits towards higher temperatures for the emetic strains, regardless of their origin. None of the emetic toxin-producing strains were able to grow below 10 degrees C. In contrast, 11% (9 food-environment strains) out of the 83 non-emetic toxin-producing strains were able to grow at 4 degrees C and 49% at 7 degrees C (28 diarrheal and 13 food-environment strains). non-emetic toxin-producing strains. All emetic toxin-producing strains were able to grow at 48 degrees C, but only 39% (16 diarrheal and 16 food-environment strains) of the non-emetic toxin-producing strains grew at this temperature. Spores from the emetic toxin-producing strains showed, on average, a higher heat resistance at 90 C and a lower germination, particularly at 7 degrees C, than spores from the other strains. No difference between the three groups in their growth kinetics at 24 degrees C, 37 degrees C, and pH 5.0, 7.0, and 8.0 was observed. Our survey shows that emetic toxin-producing strains of B. cereus have distinct characteristics, which could have important implication for the risk assessment of the emetic type of B. cereus caused food poisoning. For instance, emetic strains still represent a special risk in heat-processed foods or preheated foods that are kept warm (in restaurants and cafeterias), but should not pose a risk in refrigerated foods. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Food Microbiology
Volume109
Pages (from-to)132-138
Number of pages7
ISSN0168-1605
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2006
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • Bacillus cereus
  • ruokamyrkytys
  • 119 Other natural sciences

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