Staphylococcal food poisoning (SFP) is one of the most common food-borne diseases and results from the ingestion of staphylococcal enterotoxins (SEs) preformed in food by enterotoxigenic strains of Staphylococcus aureus. To date, more than 20 SEs have been described: SEA to SElV. All of them have superantigenic activity whereas half of them have been proved to be emetic, representing a potential hazard for consumers. This review, divided into four parts, will focus on the following: (1) the worldwide story of SFP outbreaks, (2) the characteristics and behaviour of S. aureus in food environment, (3) the toxinogenic conditions and characteristics of SEs, and (4) SFP outbreaks including symptomatology, occurrence in the European Union and currently available methods used to characterize staphylococcal outbreaks.
SummaryA cytotoxin (CytK) has been isolated from a Bacillus cereus strain that caused a severe food poisoning outbreak killing three people. A protein of 34 kDa was highly cytotoxic, and the addition of other secreted proteins gave no synergistic effect. CytK was also necrotic and haemolytic. No known B. cereus enterotoxins were produced by this strain. A DNA sequence from 1.8 kb upstream to 0.2 kb downstream of the toxin gene was sequenced. The deduced amino acid sequence of the toxin showed similarity to Staphylococcus aureus leucocidins, g-haemolysin and a-haemolysin, Clostridium perfringens b-toxin and B. cereus haemolysin II, all belonging to a family of b-barrel channel-forming toxins. There was no sequence similarity between CytK and enterotoxins of B. cereus. The upstream sequence contained a partial sequence of a putative histidine kinase gene. A recognition site for PlcR, which regulates the transcription of enterotoxins HBL and Nhe of B. cereus, was found in the promoter region of the toxin. This new cytotoxin may be responsible for a disease that is similar to, although not as severe as, the necrotic enteritis caused by the b-toxin of C. perfringens type C.
An aerobic endospore-forming bacillus ) was isolated during a severe food poisoning outbreak in France in 1998, and four other similar strains have since been isolated, also mostly from food poisoning cases. Based on 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity, these strains were shown to belong to the Bacillus cereus Group (over 97 % similarity with the current Group species) and phylogenetic distance from other validly described species of the genus Bacillus was less than 95 %. Based on 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity and MLST data, these novel strains were shown to form a robust and well-separated cluster in the B. cereus Group, and constituted the most distant cluster from species of this Group. Major fatty acids (iso-C 15 : 0 , C 16 : 0 , iso-C 17 : 0 , anteiso-C 15 : 0 , iso-C 16 : 0 , iso-C 13 : 0 ) supported the affiliation of these strains to the genus Bacillus, and more specifically to the B. cereus Group. NVH 391-98 T taxon was more specifically characterized by an abundance of iso-C 15 : 0 and low amounts of iso-C 13 : 0 compared with other members of the B. cereus Group. Genome similarity together with DNA-DNA hybridization values and physiological and biochemical tests made it possible to genotypically and phenotypically differentiate NVH 391-98 T taxon from the six current B. cereus Group species.NVH 391-98 T therefore represents a novel species, for which the name Bacillus cytotoxicus sp. Abbreviations: DDH, DNA-DNA hybridization; MLST, multilocus sequence typing.The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers for the 16S rRNA gene of strains are described in Tables 1 and S1. The sequences of the MLST genes can be found at http://mlstoslo.uio.no/index.html.A supplementary figure and three supplementary tables are available with the online version of this paper.
The rRNA gene restriction pattern sof 110 strains belonging to 12 staphylococcal species have been determined. The strains, isolated from various sources, were epidemiologically unrelated. Total DNA was cleaved with restriction enzymes HindIII and EcoRI, electrophoretically separated and probed with radiolabelled 16S rDNA from Bacillus subtilis inserted in a plasmid vector, pBR322. Fourty-four distinct HindIII patterns and 44 distinct EcoRI patterns were observed. Strains belonging to different species had different patterns. Although distinct patterns were also observed with some species, a core of common bands could be discerned within each species or subspecies. Analysis of the patterns revealed two taxa in Staphylococcus xylosus which were not evident using phenotypic characteristics. Of 18 strains which were difficult to identify using phenotypic schemes, 15 showed patterns typical of known species. The three remaining atypical strains showed unusual patterns and may belong either to a known species, not included in the study, or to a new species. Since various patterns were observed within some species (e.g.S.aureus and S. epidermidis), rRNA gene restriction patterns may have epidemiological, as well as taxonomic interest.
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