Affiliation:
1. Department of Food Science, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
While some species in the
Bacillus cereus
group are well-characterized human pathogens (e.g.,
B. anthracis
and
B. cereus sensu stricto
), the pathogenicity of other species (e.g.,
B. pseudomycoides
) either has not been characterized or is presently not well understood. To provide an updated characterization of the pathogenic potential of species in the
B. cereus
group, we classified a set of 52 isolates, including 8 type strains and 44 isolates from dairy-associated sources, into 7 phylogenetic clades and characterized them for (i) the presence of toxin genes, (ii) phenotypic characteristics used for identification, and (iii) cytotoxicity to human epithelial cells. Overall, we found that
B. cereus
toxin genes are broadly distributed but are not consistently present within individual species and/or clades. After growth at 37°C, isolates within a clade did not typically show a consistent cytotoxicity phenotype, except for isolates in clade VI (
B. weihenstephanensis
/
B. mycoides
), where none of the isolates were cytotoxic, and isolates in clade I (
B. pseudomycoides
), which consistently displayed cytotoxic activity. Importantly, our study highlights that
B. pseudomycoides
is cytotoxic toward human cells. Our results indicate that the detection of toxin genes does not provide a reliable approach to predict the pathogenic potential of
B. cereus
group isolates, as the presence of toxin genes is not always consistent with cytotoxicity phenotype. Overall, our results suggest that isolates from multiple
B. cereus
group clades have the potential to cause foodborne illness, although cytotoxicity is not always consistently found among isolates within each clade.
IMPORTANCE
Despite the importance of the
Bacillus cereus
group as a foodborne pathogen, characterizations of the pathogenic potential of all
B. cereus
group species were lacking. We show here that
B. pseudomycoides
(clade I), which has been considered a harmless environmental microorganism, produces toxins and exhibits a phenotype consistent with the production of pore-forming toxins. Furthermore,
B. mycoides/B. weihenstephanensis
isolates (clade VI) did not show cytotoxicity when grown at 37°C, despite carrying multiple toxin genes. Overall, we show that the current standard methods to characterize
B. cereus
group isolates and to detect the presence of toxin genes are not reliable indicators of species, phylogenetic clades, or an isolate's cytotoxic capacity, suggesting that novel methods are still needed for differentiating pathogenic from nonpathogenic species within the
B. cereus
group. Our results also contribute data that are necessary to facilitate risk assessments and a better understanding as to which
B. cereus
group species are likely to cause foodborne illness.
Funder
New York State Milk Promotion Advisory Board
USDA
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology