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Distribution of S-layers on the surface of Bacillus cereus strains: phylogenetic origin and ecological pressure
Authors:Mignot T  Denis B  Couture-Tosi E  Kolstø A B  Mock M  Fouet A
Institution:Toxines et Pathogénie Bactérienne (CNRS URA 2172),;Groupe de Microscopie Structurale et Moléculaire, Institut Pasteur, 28 rue du Dr Roux, 75724 Paris Cédex 15, France.;Biotechnology Centre of Oslo and Institute of Pharmacy, University of Oslo, Norway.
Abstract:Bacillus anthracis , Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis have been described as members of the Bacillus cereus group but are, in fact, one species. B. anthracis is a mammal pathogen, B. thuringiensis an entomopathogen and B. cereus a ubiquitous soil bacterium and an occasional human pathogen. In two clinical isolates of B. cereus , in some B. thuringiensis strains and in B. anthracis , an S-layer has been described. We investigated how the S-layer is distributed in B. cereus , and whether phylogeny or ecology could explain its presence on the surface of some but not all strains. We first developed a simple biochemical assay to test for the presence of the S-layer. We then used the assay with 51 strains of known genetic relationship: 26 genetically diverse B. cereus and 25 non- B. anthracis of the B. anthracis cluster. When present, the genetic organization of the S-layer locus was analysed further. It was identical in B. cereus and B. anthracis . Nineteen strains harboured an S-layer, 16 of which belonged to the B. anthracis cluster. All 19 were B. cereus clinical isolates or B. thuringiensis , except for one soil and one dairy strain. These findings suggest a common phylogenetic origin for the S-layer at the surface of B. cereus strains and, presumably, ecological pressure on its maintenance.
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