Czech Journal of Food Sciences (Aug 2009)

The occurrence of enterotoxigenic isolates of B. cereus in foodstuffs

  • Josef Brychta,
  • Jiří Smola,
  • Petr Pipek,
  • Jaroslav Ondráček,
  • Vladimír Bednář,
  • Alois Čížek,
  • Tomáš Brychta

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17221/84/2009-CJFS
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 4
pp. 284 – 292

Abstract

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Enterotoxigenic Bacillus cereus was detected in a variety of meat stuffs (36), ready-to-cook products (5), and swabs (7). The bacterial colonies isolated from PEMBA agar were identified as B. cereus. The 85 isolates were examined for the enterotoxin production using both TECRA-VIA and BCET-RPLA kits (ELISA - 47, RPLA - 38). Thirty two isolates (66%) were positive for enterotoxin using the ELISA test while only 15 isolates (39%) gave positive results in the RPLA test system. In total, 178 (91.8%) and 164 (84%) of the strains isolated in our laboratory (from various foods) were enterotoxigenic as determined using TECRA-VIA and BCET-RPLA, respectively. Parallel enterotoxin positive results obtained using both tests were demonstrated in only 9 isolates from 19 assessed (47.4%). Coincidental negative results from both kits were established for 3 isolates (15.8%) only. The isolates of B.cereus from meat were resistant to cephalothin (57%), clindamycin (14%), oxytetracycline (14%), and erythromycin (7%). The isolates from swabs were resistant to cephalothin (83%), erythromycin (16%), clindamycin (16%) and enrofloxacin (16%).

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