From soil to gut: Bacillus cereus and its food poisoning toxins
Norwegian University of Life Sciences
Abstract
Bacillus cereus is widespread in nature and frequently isolated from soil and growing plants, but it is also well adapted for growth in the intestinal tract of insects and mammals. From these habitats it is easily spread to foods, where it may cause an emetic or a diarrhoeal type of food-associated illness that is becoming increasingly important in the industrialized world. The emetic disease is a food intoxication caused by cereulide, a small ring-formed dodecadepsipeptide. Similar to the virulence determinants that distinguish Bacillus thuringiensis and Bacillus anthracis from B. cereus, the genetic determinants of cereulide are plasmid-borne. The diarrhoeal syndrome of B. cereus is an infection caused by…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.02
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 252
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Bacillus cereus
- Biology
- Cereus
- Microbiology
- Virulence
- Enterotoxin
- Toxin
- Food poisoning