The Toxins of Bacillus cereus: Cereulide

Bacillus cereus. Toxins of Bacillus cereus, Woman feeling sick and suffering abdominal pain

Bacillus cereus produces several clinically relevant toxins that fall into two main categories: emetic (vomiting-type) toxins and diarrheal toxins. These toxins differ in structure, mechanism of action, and clinical presentation.


1. Emetic Toxin

Cereulide

  • Type: Heat-stable cyclic dodecadepsipeptide

  • Disease association: Emetic (vomiting) syndrome

  • Mechanism: Acts as a potassium ionophore → mitochondrial dysfunction → stimulation of the vagus nerve

  • Key features:

    • Preformed in food (commonly rice and starchy foods)

    • Resistant to heat, acid, and proteolysis

    • Symptoms begin rapidly (1–5 hours)

  • Clinical significance: Can cause severe toxicity, including acute liver failure in rare cases


2. Diarrheal Enterotoxins

These are heat-labile, protein-based toxins produced in the intestine after ingestion of spores or vegetative cells.

Hemolysin BL (HBL)

  • Components: Three-part toxin (B, L1, L2)

  • Mechanism: Pore formation in intestinal epithelial cell membranes

  • Effects: Diarrhea, abdominal cramps, fluid secretion

Non-hemolytic Enterotoxin (NHE)

  • Components: Three-part toxin (NheA, NheB, NheC)

  • Mechanism: Pore formation → epithelial cell damage

  • Effects: Diarrhea and abdominal pain

  • Note: Most common diarrheal toxin produced by B. cereus

Cytotoxin K (CytK)

  • Type: Single-protein toxin

  • Mechanism: Pore-forming cytolysin

  • Clinical relevance: Associated with severe and occasionally fatal diarrheal disease


3. Additional Virulence Factors (Less Central to Food Poisoning)

  • Phospholipases (e.g., phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C)

  • Proteases

  • Hemolysins

These contribute to tissue destruction and extraintestinal infections (e.g., endophthalmitis, wound infections).

Toxin Syndrome Heat Stability Key Feature
Cereulide Emetic Heat-stable Preformed in food
HBL Diarrheal Heat-labile Three-component toxin
NHE Diarrheal Heat-labile Most common enterotoxin
CytK Diarrheal Heat-labile Severe disease association
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