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Characterization and Exposure Assessment of Emetic Bacillus cereus and Cereulide Production in Food Products on the Dutch Market

The emetic toxin cereulide, which can be produced by Bacillus cereus, can be the cause of food poisoning upon ingestion by the consumer. The toxin causes vomiting and is mainly produced in farinaceous food products. This article includes the prevalence of B. cereus and of cereulide in food products...

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Published in:Journal of food protection 2016-02, Vol.79 (2), p.230-238
Main Authors: Biesta-Peters, Elisabeth G, Dissel, Serge, Reij, Martine W, Zwietering, Marcel H, in't Veld, Paul H
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description The emetic toxin cereulide, which can be produced by Bacillus cereus, can be the cause of food poisoning upon ingestion by the consumer. The toxin causes vomiting and is mainly produced in farinaceous food products. This article includes the prevalence of B. cereus and of cereulide in food products in The Netherlands, a characterization of B. cereus isolates obtained, cereulide production conditions, and a comparison of consumer exposure estimates with those of a previous exposure assessment. Food samples (n = 1,489) were tested for the presence of B. cereus; 5.4% of the samples contained detectable levels (>10(2) CFU/g), and 0.7% contained levels above 10(5) CFU/g. Samples (n = 3,008) also were tested for the presence of cereulide. Two samples (0.067%) contained detectable levels of cereulide at 3.2 and 5.4 μg/kg of food product. Of the 481 tested isolates, 81 produced cereulide and/or contained the ces gene. None of the starch-positive and hbl-containing isolates possessed the ces gene, whereas all strains contained the nhe genes. Culture of emetic B. cereus under nonoptimal conditions revealed a delay in onset of cereulide production compared with culture under optimal conditions, and cereulide was produced in all cases when B. cereus cells had been in the stationary phase for some time. The prevalence of cereulide-contaminated food approached the prevalence of contaminated products estimated in an exposure assessment. The main food safety focus associated with this pathogen should be to prevent germination and growth of any B. cereus present in food products and thus prevent cereulide production in foods.
doi_str_mv 10.4315/0362-028X.JFP-15-217
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Culture of emetic B. cereus under nonoptimal conditions revealed a delay in onset of cereulide production compared with culture under optimal conditions, and cereulide was produced in all cases when B. cereus cells had been in the stationary phase for some time. The prevalence of cereulide-contaminated food approached the prevalence of contaminated products estimated in an exposure assessment. 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language eng
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source ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Bacilli
Bacillus cereus - classification
Bacillus cereus - genetics
Bacillus cereus - isolation & purification
Bacillus cereus - metabolism
Bacteria
Depsipeptides - analysis
Depsipeptides - metabolism
Emetic toxin
Emetics - analysis
Emetics - metabolism
Food contamination
Food contamination & poisoning
Food Contamination - analysis
Food Contamination - economics
Food Contamination - statistics & numerical data
Food Handling
Food Microbiology
Food poisoning
Food products
Food safety
Genes
Ingestion
Laboratories
Legislation
Milk
Netherlands - epidemiology
Prevalence
Production kinetics
Public health
Restaurants
Rice
Toxins
title Characterization and Exposure Assessment of Emetic Bacillus cereus and Cereulide Production in Food Products on the Dutch Market
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