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Diarrhoeal toxin production at low temperature by selected strains of Bacillus cereus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 November 1997

CHRISTOPHE FERMANIAN
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Central d'Hygiène Alimentaire, Centre National d'Etudes Vétérinaires et Alimentaires, F-94701 Maison-Alfort, France
CHRISTIANE LAPEYRE
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Central d'Hygiène Alimentaire, Centre National d'Etudes Vétérinaires et Alimentaires, F-94701 Maison-Alfort, France
JEAN-MARC FREMY
Affiliation:
Laboratoire Central d'Hygiène Alimentaire, Centre National d'Etudes Vétérinaires et Alimentaires, F-94701 Maison-Alfort, France
MAURICE CLAISSE
Affiliation:
Centre de Génétique Moléculaire, Laboratoire Propre du CNRS associé à l'UMPC (Paris VI), F-91198 Gif-sur-Yvette, France

Abstract

The growth of four Bacillus cereus strains producing diarrhoeal toxin at 32°C (F4433/73 and 29.155, isolated on the occasion of foodborne outbreaks, and F4581/76L and F4581/76R, two variants of a clinical strain), a weakly toxigenic strain isolated in routine analysis of food (3505M) and an emetic isolate (F3502/73) was investigated at low temperature. Biomass was determined by protein assay. Generation times were: for strain F3502/73, which grew at [ges ]12°C, 8·71 h (at 12°C); for other strains, which grew at [ges ]10°C, 10·2 to ∼18·9 h (at 10°C). Toxin production during growth was evaluated by a commercial kit (Oxoid) and by a toxicity test on Chinese hamster ovary cells. Strains F4433/73 and F4581/76, secreting high levels of diarrhoeal toxin during the exponential phase at 32°C, produced high levels of toxicity at 10°C until the stationary phase. Strain 29.155 had decreased toxin production at 10°C. Toxicities for cellular extracts remained low when compared with culture filtrates. A correlation was found between the toxicity values given by the two detection methods tested, and the suitability of both methods for the detection of potential poisoning isolates is discussed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Proprietors of Journal of Dairy Research 1997

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