Enterotoxic activity of hemolysin BL from Bacillus cereus

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Abstract

Bacillus cereus causes exotoxin-mediated diarrheal food poisoning. Hemolysin BL (HBL) is a well-characterized B. cereus toxin composed of three components (B, L1, and L2) that together possess hemolytic, cytotoxic, dermonecrotic, and vascular permeability activities. Here, we show that HBL causes fluid accumulation in ligated rabbit ileal loops at a dose of 5 μg of each component per loop. Maximal fluid responses occurred for combinations of all three components at ≥25 μg of each component per loop. Individual components and binary combinations did not cause significant fluid accumulation at 25 μg of each component. Specific antisera to HBL components inhibited the fluid accumulation response of crude culture supernatant from B. cereus F837/76. These antisera were tested against an antiserum to a partially characterized multicomponent diarrheal toxin described previously by Thompson et al. (N. E. Thompson, M. J. Ketterhagen, M. S. Bergdoll, and E. J. Shantz, Infect. Immun. 43:887-894, 1984). Immunoblot and immunoprecipitation analyses indicate that HBL and that toxin are identical. These results confirm previous speculation that HBL is a tripartite enterotoxin that, as far all of its other known activities, requires all three components for maximal activity.

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Beecher, D. J., Schoeni, J. L., & Lee Wong, A. C. (1995). Enterotoxic activity of hemolysin BL from Bacillus cereus. Infection and Immunity, 63(11), 4423–4428. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.63.11.4423-4428.1995

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