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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, 03 1995, 636-640, Vol 33, No. 3
R Ahmed, P Sankar-Mistry, S Jackson, HW Ackermann and SS Kasatiya
Bacillus cereus is responsible for an increasing number of food poisoning
cases. By using 12 bacteriophages isolated from sewage, a typing scheme for
B. cereus isolates from outbreaks or sporadic cases of food poisoning was
developed. The phages belonged to three morphotypes. Ten phages with
contractile tails and icosahedral heads were members of the Myoviridae
family, and two phages with noncontractile tails belonged to the
Siphoviridae family. Phage 11 represented a new species. It had an
isometric head and a very long contractile tail with long wavy tail fibers
and was one of the largest viruses known. The vast majority of 166 B.
cereus strains (161, or 97%) isolated from food poisoning cases were
typeable. Of 146 strains isolated from 18 outbreaks, 142 (97%) could be
divided into 17 phage types. A good correlation, on the order of 80 to
100%, between phage types of strains isolated from suspected foods and
those of strains isolated from stools of symptomatic patients was observed.
Most Bacillus thuringiensis strains were also typeable, providing further
evidence of the close relatedness of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis. This
phage typing scheme can be a valuable epidemiological tool in tracing the
origins of food poisoning caused by B. cereus.
Copyright © 1995 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Bacillus cereus phage typing as an epidemiological tool in outbreaks of food poisoning
Ontario Public Health Laboratory, Ottawa, Canada.
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