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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2002, p. 3147-3151, Vol. 68, No. 6
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.6.3147-3151.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Enterotoxin Production in Natural Isolates of Bacillaceae outside the Bacillus cereus Group
Rebecca J. Phelps and John L. McKillip*
School of Biological Sciences, Louisiana Tech University, Ruston, Louisiana
Received 9 August 2001/
Accepted 12 March 2002

ABSTRACT
Thirty-nine
Bacillus strains obtained from a variety of environmental
and food sources were screened by PCR for the presence of five
gene targets (
hblC,
hblD,
hblA,
nheA, and
nheB) in two enterotoxin
operons (HBL and NHE) traditionally harbored by
Bacillus cereus.
Seven isolates exhibited a positive signal for at least three
of the five possible targets, including
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens,
B. cereus,
Bacillus circulans,
Bacillus lentimorbis,
Bacillus pasteurii, and
Bacillus thuringiensis subsp.
kurstaki. PCR amplicons
were confirmed by restriction enzyme digest patterns compared
to a positive control strain. Enterotoxin gene expression of
each strain grown in a model food system (skim milk) was monitored
by gene-specific reverse transcription-PCR and confirmed with
the Oxoid RPLA and Tecra BDE commercial kits. Lecithinase production
was noted on egg yolk-polymyxin B agar for all strains except
B. lentimorbis, whereas discontinuous beta hemolysis was exhibited
by all seven isolates grown on 5% sheep blood agar plates. The
results of this study confirm the presence of enterotoxin genes
in natural isolates of
Bacillus spp. outside the
B. cereus group
and the ability of these strains to produce toxins in a model
food system under aerated conditions at 32°C.

INTRODUCTION
Bacillus cereus is traditionally considered the most problematic
member of the genus
Bacillus to the food industry due to the
ability of many strains to produce enterotoxins, a topic which
has been reviewed recently (
9,
11,
14,
24).
B. cereus may express
at least two distinct multiple-component enterotoxins, the genes
for which have been cloned and sequenced (
13,
16,
29). A tripartite
hemolytic heat-labile enterotoxin designated HBL is the product
of an operon that includes
hblA,
hblD, and
hblC, which encode
the binding subunit (B) and the L
1 and L
2 lytic components,
respectively (
17,
29). Additionally, a nonhemolytic enterotoxin
(NHE) operon has recently been characterized (
13). The subunits
of the
B. cereus NHE also include two apparent lytic components,
NH
1 and NH
2, and a third gene product that remains uncharacterized.
In addition, a third enterotoxin has been described that is
composed of a single 41-kDa subunit (
2). The exact role of this
toxin, BceT, is still unclear compared to what is known about
HBL and NHE subunit enterotoxins.
Consumption of enterotoxigenic Bacillus spp. at high cell densities results in symptoms of diarrhea, with possible vomiting from a separate heat-stable emetic toxin (3, 10). Symptoms may appear 10 to 14 h following ingestion of foodstuffs contaminated with enterotoxigenic strains. Foods most often implicated in the diarrheal syndrome include poultry, cooked meats, soups, desserts, and occasionally fluid and dry milk products (19, 20). The infective dose is high (ca. >106 CFU/g) because symptoms rely on the ingestion of the viable cells or spores, not the preformed toxin, in affected foods (12). Such food may pose a threat to consumers if the product has been temperature abused during shipment or storage or when psychrotrophic strains of Bacillus spp. predominate and grow to high densities prior to consumption (7, 15, 18, 25, 28, 30).
Relatively few researchers have reported the presence of foodborne illness associated with Bacillus spp. other than B. cereus. However, due to the high degree of phylogenetic relatedness among members of this genus, a variety of species must be considered potentially enterotoxigenic, including the well-characterized insect pathogen Bacillus thuringiensis (1, 4, 6, 8). A number of Bacillus spp. have been shown to produce enterotoxins, including Bacillus circulans, Bacillus lentus, Bacillus mycoides, and Bacillus subtilis (5). Moreover, nucleic-acid-based detection assays designed to target enterotoxin genes may not always provide a positive signal when in fact the gene product is expressed, and vice versa (27).

Bacterial isolation.
Some
Bacillus spp. used in this study were obtained as known
pure cultures from other investigators, while others were isolated
from food or environmental sources (Table
1). For natural isolates,
1 g (or 1 ml) of sample was placed into 10 ml of sterile 0.1%
peptone (Amresco, Solon, Ohio), and the solution was mixed well
and placed into a 70°C water bath for 30 min with occasional
mixing. The treated sample was inoculated into sterile skim
milk for a 10-h nonselective enrichment (32°C, with shaking)
and then pour plated by using Trypticase soy agar (Difco, Detroit,
Mich.) and incubated at 32°C for 24 h. Resulting colonies
were restreaked onto GP agar (
23) to ensure purity of culture.
Gram stains were used to confirm isolation. Unknown strains
were identified by M. F. A. Bal'a at the Department of Food
Science and Technology, Mississippi State University, Starkville,
by using the MIDI system (Microbial ID, Inc., Newark, Del.)
and with the API 50 CH system (bioMerieux Vitek, Inc., Hazelwood,
Mo.).

DNA extraction and PCR.
To screen isolates for the presence of one or more enterotoxin
genes, total DNA was extracted by first growing cells to log
phase (

10
6 CFU/ml) in brain heart infusion (BHI) broth (Difco)
at 37°C. One milliliter of cells was removed and centrifuged
at 10,000
x g for 2 min, and the pellet was resuspended in 50
µl of sterile water, boiled for 5 min, and centrifuged
again for 3 min at 12,000
x g. The top, DNA-containing, phase
was removed to a new tube, and the DNA was quantitated by using
a SmartSpec 3000 spectrophotometer (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.).
PCR was performed by using a Gene Cycler (Bio-Rad). The PCRs included 20 pmol of each primer (Table 2), 45 µl of PCR Supermix (all from Life Technologies, Grand Island, N.Y.), and 1 µl (100 ng) of template DNA. Amplification consisted of an initial denaturation at 94°C, followed by 35 cycles of 94°C for 20 s, 54°C for 1 min, and 72°C for 2 min. A final 7-min 72°C extension followed. PCR products (5 µl) were analyzed on a 1% (wt/vol) agarose gel (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) and visualized by UV light.
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TABLE 2. Sequences, positions, and target gene designations for PCR primers used to screen Bacillus spp. in this study
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RNA isolation and reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR).
Total RNA was isolated from late-log-phase cultures (optical
density at 550 nm of 0.2, corresponding to growth curve densities
of 10
7 CFU/ml) grown in sterile skim milk at 32°C with shaking
at 100 rpm. Trizol reagent (Life Technologies) was used according
to the manufacturer's instructions. Purified RNA was treated
with DNase I by suspension of the pellet in a cocktail consisting
of 1 µl of DNase I reaction buffer, 1.5 µl of DNase
I (both from Life Technologies), 0.8 µl of RNasin (Promega,
Madison, Wis.), and 4.7 µl of diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC)
water (Ambion, Austin, Tex.). The digest was incubated for 45
min at 37°C, inactivated by the addition of 1 µl of
EDTA (Life Technologies), and incubated for 10 min at 65°C.
The RNA was recovered by extraction once with an equal volume
of cold phenol-chloroform, pH 4.7 (Sigma), and precipitation
with 0.1 vol of cold 3 M sodium acetate, pH 5.2, and 2.5 vol
of cold ethanol, followed by a 4°C centrifugation step at
14,000
x g for 30 min.
The DNase-treated RNA (0.4 µg) was subjected to RT-PCR by resuspension in a reaction mixture consisting of 25 µl of 2x RT reaction mixture, 1 µl of a RT-Taq mixture (reverse transcriptase-Taq polymerase) (both from Life Technologies), 4 µl of the appropriate gene-specific primer set (20 pmol each) (Table 2), and DEPC water to 50 µl. Negative controls included a no-RT and a no-template sample assembled for each reaction set. All reaction mixtures were incubated at 50°C for 45 min, followed by 35 cycles of PCR as described earlier.

Restriction fragment length polymorphism confirmation of amplicons.
To confirm amplicons, each product was digested with a restriction
enzyme that generated a known cleavage pattern and compared
to the fragments generated in the positive control strain (
B. cereus, number 56) by using the same enzyme. The concentration
of DNA in each digest (measured in micrograms per microliter)
was determined spectrophotometrically and adjusted to 1 µg/µl.
The
nheA amplicon was digested with
PstI, whereas
nheB and
hblC amplicons were digested with
PvuII.
RsaI was used to digest
the
hblC fragment, and
hblA was digested with
SstI (all enzymes
were from Life Technologies). All reaction components were assembled
according to the manufacturer's instructions and digested for
90 min at 37°C. The reactions were run on 1.5% (wt/vol)
agarose gels (Sigma) and visualized with ethidium bromide and
UV light.

Enterotoxin detection.
Enterotoxins were detected by using two commercial immunoassay
kits. The BCET-RPLA kit (Oxoid, Ogdensburg, N.Y.) was used to
detect HblC in enrichment cultures, while the Tecra BDE kit
(Tecra Diagnostics, Frenchs Forest, Australia) detected NheA.
Both kits were used on each purified isolate according to the
respective manufacturer's instructions.

Hemolysis and lecithinase detection.
Purified cultures of each strain were streaked onto 5% sheep
blood agar (LABSCO, Louisville, Ky.) and egg yolk-polymyxin
B Agar (Oxoid) and incubated at 37°C for 24 h for detection
of discontinuous hemolysis patterns and lecithinase production,
respectively.

Bacterial isolation and nucleic acid assays.
Thirty-nine
Bacillus strains were isolated by the methods described
above or were obtained from others as laboratory strains (Table
1). Each strain is identified with a corresponding number. Enterotoxin
gene-specific PCR allowed for seven strains (indicated in boldface
type in Table
1) to be identified subsequently as positive for
at least one of the five possible toxin gene targets. Specifically,
all seven strains were found to harbor the two NHE operon genes
and at least one member of the HBL operon (Fig.
1).
B. amyloliquefaciens,
B. circulans, and both
B. cereus strains contained all HBL gene
targets.
B. thuringiensis subsp.
kurstaki exhibited detectable
signal from
hblC,
nheA, and
nheB, and
B. lentimorbis and
B. pasteurii contained
hblC,
hblD,
nheA, and
nheB (Fig.
1). RT-PCR
showed detectable expression of
hblC and
hblA in only one
B. cereus strain (Fig.
2). Addition of specific substances, such
as magnesium, bovine serum albumin, or dimethyl sulfoxide, in
the PCRs or dilution of template to circumvent potential carryover
inhibitors did nothing to improve the detection of target transcripts
(data not shown). Plate counts on cells at the time of RNA purification
confirmed a density of 3.5
x 10
7 CFU/ml.
For the most part, reports on toxin production by
Bacillus spp.
other than
B. cereus are still confined to members of the
B. cereus subgroup, which also includes
B. anthracis,
B. mycoides,
B. pseudomycoides,
B. thuringiensis, and
B. weihenstephanensis (
27). Only one isolate (
B. cereus, number 56) produced a positive
signal upon RT-PCR on aerated skim milk cultures, and even this
strain was positive only for
hblC and
hblA. Since this strain
(among others) appeared positive for all other targets by DNA
PCR, poor RT-PCR assay sensitivity is the most likely explanation
for the inconsistent results. The food system in which our cells
were grown further complicates RNA extraction, as the presence
of carryover proteins, fats, and carbohydrates may detrimentally
affect enzyme reaction conditions during RT, DNase treatment,
and/or DNA amplification. The results of the immunoassays, however,
indicate that enterotoxins are indeed being produced in most
of the isolates used in our study despite the absence of detectable
mRNA in all but one strain. The medium used in this study was
selected to simulate a situation involving growth of enterotoxigenic
Bacillus spp. in a temperature-abused product. Aeration conditions
have previously been shown to maximize toxin expression, particularly
in the presence of carbohydrates (
7,
30).

Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis.
To confirm the identities of PCR products, each amplicon was
subjected to restriction enzyme digestion, and the banding profile
was compared to that of the positive control strain,
B. cereus.
Products of the digestion of
nheA amplicon with
PstI resulted
in a 134-bp fragment and a 427-bp fragment in all isolates but
B. thuringiensis subsp.
kurstaki, which was not digested (Fig.
3). This result is likely due to minor sequence differences
within the amplified segment of this strain, one that has been
previously documented as being potentially enterotoxigenic (
1,
6,
8,
15).
The
nheB amplicon digestion using
PvuII for all strains showed
fragments of 114 and 197 bp, and the
hblD product from all strains
except for number 4 generated bands at 742 and 260 bp after
digestion with
PvuII (data not shown).
RsaI digestion of the
hblC amplicon from all strains resulted in fragments of 119
and 202 bp, and
hblA amplicon digestion using
SstI for
B. circulans,
B. amyloliquefaciens, and both
B. cereus strains resulted in
584- and 600-bp fragments (data not shown). All of the digestion
products except for the
nheB amplicon from isolate number 4
were consistent with patterns obtained from the positive control
B. cereus (Fig.
3).

Enterotoxin detection, hemolysis, and lecithinase production.
Each of the seven enterotoxigenic
Bacillus spp. was subjected
to the two commercial immunoassays as described above. All were
positive for NheA, and all but
B. thuringiensis subsp.
kurstaki were positive for HblC.
For all enterotoxigenic strains, discontinuous beta hemolysis was apparent following incubation on sheep blood agar plates. Lecithinase production on egg yolk-polymyxin B agar was observed from all strains except B. lentimorbis and B. cereus. Hsieh et al. (17) found discontinuous hemolysis patterns on sheep blood agar and BCET-RPLA assay results to be highly correlated with the presence of the hblA gene in most but not all of some 100 Bacillus spp. tested. However, results from this study and others indicate a lack of reliability in the presence of one marker alone in determining the virulence of Bacillus strains. For example, PCR results for enterotoxigenic Bacillus spp. may not necessarily correlate with immunoassay results, and vice versa. Mantynen and Lindstrom (21) developed a PCR assay targeting hblA and noted general agreement between this assay and the commercial RPLA assay but not between this assay and the BDE enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit results. Another study, by Pruß et al. (27), found that, although hblA is broadly distributed among members of the B. cereus group, Southern blot hybridization occasionally occurred in the absence of a PCR product. Another study screened a total of 186 Bacillus strains for emetic toxin and HBL toxin production, biochemical characteristics, and ribotyping patterns (26). Approximately one-fifth of the strains screened, including enterotoxigenic isolates, were lecithinase negative. Collectively, these studies emphasize the need to design assays for Bacillus spp. that do not rely on a single virulence determinant.
Similarly, our PCR results detected individual enterotoxin genes in some but not all strains that were subsequently shown to produce enterotoxin when grown in milk. B. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki proved to be the most unusual by exhibiting negative results on the commercial RPLA kit, which detects the L2 subunit of the hemolytic enterotoxin, a gene (hblC) for which this isolate demonstrated a positive PCR amplicon. Moreover, B. lentimorbis and B. pasteurii were both positive for hblC and hblD amplicons only but demonstrated similar toxin production as measured by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit. Finally, all seven isolates clearly yielded discontinuous hemolysis patterns on 5% sheep blood agar plates, but both B. lentimorbis and B. cereus were negative for lecithinase production on egg yolk-polymyxin B agar plates. Our data therefore further demonstrate the heterogeneity of specific virulence factors in several natural isolates of Bacillus spp., most of which are not presently categorized within the B. cereus group.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Funding was provided by a grant (awarded to J.L.M.) from the
Louisiana Board of Regents.
We are grateful to Farid Bal'a at Mississippi State University for strain typing with the MIDI system and to Catherine Wakeman at Louisiana Tech University for technical assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: School of Biological Sciences, Louisiana Tech University, Box 3179, Ruston, LA 71272. Phone: (318) 257-4573. Fax: (318) 257-4574. E-mail:
mckillip{at}latech.edu 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, June 2002, p. 3147-3151, Vol. 68, No. 6
0099-2240/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.68.6.3147-3151.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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