Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio 45219
Abstract
Bacillus cereus
phospholipase was characterized as a phospholipase C by the analysis of lecithin degradation products by thin-layer and paper chromatography. Methanol in the growth menstruum inhibited completely the synthesis of phospholipase C, whereas the synthesis of lethal toxin and hemolysin were only partially inhibited. Dialysis of preformed
B. cereus
products against ethyl alcohol and methanol did not inactivate hemolytic, phospholipase C, or lethal activity. The hemolytic and lethal activities of culture filtrates were completely abolished by trypsin, but phospholipase C activity was resistant to inactivation. Lethal and phospholipase C properties of culture filtrates were resistant to inactivation at 45 C, whereas the hemolytic activity was completely destroyed. Lethal, hemolytic, and phospholipase C activities appeared simultaneously in a complex growth menstruum, but the kinetics of synthesis were different in all cases. Resolution of
B. cereus
filtrates on columns of Sephadex showed that the phospholipase C, hemolysin, and lethal toxin are distinct proteins. Evidence is also presented which suggests a correlation between the synthesis of
B. cereus
toxin and the period of transition from vegetative growth to sporulation. The activity of each
B. cereus
product was cation-independent, as opposed to cation-dependency of the phospholipase C and lethal activities of
Clostridium perfringens
α-toxin. Immunological cross-reactivity between the
B. cereus
products and
C. perfringens
α-toxin was not apparent; indeed, they were shown to be antigenically distinct.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
40 articles.
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