Osong Public Health Res Perspect.  2017 Feb;8(1):71-77. 10.24171/j.phrp.2017.8.1.10.

Surveillance of Bacillus cereus Isolates in Korea from 2012 to 2014

Affiliations
  • 1Division of Enteric Diseases, Center for Infectious Diseases, National Research Institute of Health, Osong, Korea. strepto13@hotmail.com

Abstract


OBJECTIVES
To investigate the prevalence and toxin production characteristics of non-emetic and emetic Bacillus cereus strains isolated via the laboratory surveillance system in Korea.
METHODS
A total of 667 B. cereus strains were collected by the Korea National Research Institute of Health laboratory surveillance system from 2012 to 2014. The collected strains were analyzed by geographical region, season, patient age, and patient sex. Additionally, the prevalence rates of enterotoxin and emetic toxin genes were evaluated.
RESULTS
The isolation rate of B. cereus strains increased during the summer, but the isolation rate was evenly distributed among patient age groups. Emetic toxin was produced by 20.2% of the isolated strains. The prevalence rates of five enterotoxin genes (entFM, nheA, cytK2, hblC, and bceT) were 85.0, 78.6, 44.5, 36.6, and 29.7%, respectively, among non-emetic strains and 77.8, 59.3, 17.8, 11.9 and 12.6%, respectively, among emetic strains. Thus, the prevalence rates of all five enterotoxin genes were lower in emetic B. cereus.
CONCLUSION
The prevalence of enterotoxin genes differed between non-emetic and emetic B. cereus strains. Among emetic B. cereus strains, the prevalence rates of two enterotoxin genes (cytK2 and hblC) were lower than those among the non-emetic strains. In both the emetic and non-emetic strains isolated in Korea, nheA and entFM were the most prevalent enterotoxin genes.

Keyword

Bacillus cereus; epidemiology; enterotoxins

MeSH Terms

Academies and Institutes
Bacillus cereus*
Bacillus*
Enterotoxins
Epidemiology
Humans
Korea*
Prevalence
Seasons
Enterotoxins
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