The Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus cereus is a facultative anaerobe that is still poorly characterized metabolically. In this study, the aerobic vegetative growth and anaerobic vegetative growth of the food-borne pathogen B. cereus F4430/73 strain were compared with those of the genome-sequenced ATCC14579 strain using glucose and glycerol as fermentative and nonfermentative carbon sources, respectively. Uncontrolled batch cultures on several defined media showed that B. cereus strains had high amino acid or pyruvate requirements for anaerobic fermentative growth. In addition, growth performance was considerably improved by maintaining the pH of the culture medium near neutrality. Spectra of fermentation by-products were typically (per mole of glucose) 0.2-0.4 acetate, 1.1-1.4 L-lactate, 0.3-0.4 formate, and 0.05-0.2 ethanol with only traces of succinate, pyruvate, and 2,3-butanediol. These spectra were drastically changed in the presence of 20 mmol nitrate x L(-1), which stimulated anaerobic growth. During anaerobic and aerobic respiration, the persistent production of acetate and other by-products indicated overflow metabolisms. This was especially true in glucose-grown cells for which respiratory complex III made only a minor contribution to growth. Surprisingly, oxygen uptake rates linked to the cytochrome c and quinol branches of the respiratory chain were maintained at high levels in anaerobic, respiring, or fermenting cells. Growth and metabolic features of B. cereus F4430/73 are discussed using biochemical and genomic data.
Glucose-grown cells of Bacillus cereus respond to anaerobiosis and low extracellular oxidoreduction potentials (ORP), notably by enhancing enterotoxin production. This response involves the ResDE two-component system. We searched the B. cereus genome for other redox response regulators potentially involved in this adaptive process, and we identified one gene encoding a protein predicted to have an amino acid sequence 58% identical (80% similar) to that of the Bacillus subtilis Fnr redox regulator. The fnr gene of the food-borne pathogen B. cereus F4430/73 has been cloned and partially characterized. We showed that fnr was up-regulated during anaerobic fermentation, especially when fermentation occurred at low ORP (under highly reducing conditions). The expression of fnr was down-regulated in the presence of O 2 and nitrate which, unlike fumarate, stimulated the respiratory pathways. The inactivation of B. cereus fnr abolished fermentative growth but only moderately affected aerobic and anaerobic nitrate respiratory growth. Analyses of glucose by-products and the transcription profiles of key catabolic genes confirmed the strong regulatory impact of Fnr on B. cereus fermentative pathways. More importantly, the fnr mutation strongly decreased the expression of PlcR-dependent hbl and nhe genes, leading to the absence of hemolysin BL (Hbl) and nonhemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe) secretion by the mutant. These data indicate that fnr is essential for both fermentation and toxinogenesis. The results also suggest that both Fnr and the ResDE two-component system belong to a redox regulatory pathway that functions at least partially independently of the pleiotropic virulence gene regulator PlcR to regulate enterotoxin gene expression.
In the present study, a food-borne pathogen strain of Bacillus cereus (F4430/73) was anaerobically grown in controlled-batch conditions under low initial oxidoreduction potential (ORP=-148 mV) using hydrogen gas as reducing agent. Its physiological characteristics, including growth, glucose fermentation capacity and enterotoxin production, were compared with anaerobic conditions generated by nitrogen gas (ORP=+ 45 mV). The results showed that low ORP affected growth mainly during the early stages. Maximal specific rates of growth and glucose consumption were reduced, and drastic changes in time profiles of fermentation product concentration were observed. Production of lactate was promoted at the expense of acetate. Nevertheless, low ORP did not affect final biomass yield. Under both ORP conditions, Non-haemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe) was produced early during the exponential growth phase as a first enterotoxin and Haemolysin BL (Hbl) later during the early stationary growth phase as a second enterotoxin. The major effect of low ORP was the strong stimulation of Hbl production and, to a lesser extent, Nhe production. This control was complex, involving different levels of regulation. We discussed the regulation of enterotoxin expression and the involvement of the pleiotropic regulator PlcR.
In contrast to Bacillus subtilis, the role of the two-component regulatory system ResDE has not yet been investigated in the facultative anaerobe Bacillus cereus. We examined the role of ResDE in the food-borne pathogen B. cereus F4430/73 by constructing resDE and resE mutants. Growth performances, glucose metabolism, and expression of hemolysin BL (Hbl) and nonhemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe) were analyzed in the three strains under distinct oxygenation and extracellular oxidoreduction potential (ORP) conditions. We show that growth and glucose metabolism were only moderately perturbed in both resDE and resE mutants under aerobiosis, microaerobiosis, and anaerobiosis generated under N 2 atmosphere (initial ORP ؍ ؉45 mV). The major effects of resDE and resE mutations were observed under low-ORP anaerobic conditions generated under hydrogen atmosphere (iORP ؍ ؊148 mV). These conditions normally favor enterotoxin production in the wild type. The resE mutation was more deleterious to the cells than the resDE mutation, causing growth limitation and strong deregulation of key catabolic genes. More importantly, the resE mutation abolished the production of enterotoxins under all of the conditions examined. The resDE mutation only decreased enterotoxin expression under anaerobiosis, with a more pronounced effect under low-ORP conditions. Thus, the ResDE system was found to exert major control on both fermentative growth and enterotoxin expression, and it is concluded that the ResDE system of B. cereus should be considered an anaerobic redox regulator. The data presented also provide evidence that the ResDE-dependent regulation of enterotoxins might function at least partially independently of the pleiotropic virulence gene regulator PlcR.The facultative anaerobic, spore-forming Bacillus cereus has gained notoriety as an opportunistic human pathogen capable of causing a wide variety of diseases ranging from periodontitis, endophthalmitis, and meningitis in immunocompromised patients to the more frequent gastrointestinal infections (24,44). B. cereus is associated with two types of gastrointestinal infection, both causing diarrhea and vomiting after the ingestion of a contaminated food. Recent evidence suggests that B. cereus cells are primarily ingested as spores and that the spores are able to adhere to the mucosal epithelium of the small intestine, where they can then germinate (52). The resulting vegetative cells produce three enterotoxins responsible for diarrheal symptoms (2,8,18). These enterotoxins are hemolysin BL (Hbl) (4), nonhemolytic enterotoxin (Nhe) (27), and the single cytotoxin protein Cyt K (11, 28). Hbl is composed of three proteins L2, L1, and B encoded by genes clustered into an operon with the transcriptional order hblC, hblD, and hblA (42). All three components need to be excreted to induce biological effects, which include enterotoxic activity and hemolytic and dermonecrotic activities (5, 6). Nhe is also a threecomponent enterotoxin. It was first isolated from an Hbl-negative strain of B. cereus i...
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