Abstract: | Eleven of 16 samples of rice on sale in rice shops and supermarkets in Hong Kong contained Bacillus cereus. Although B. cereus counts did not exceed 100 bacteria/g in most of the positive samples, a sample of Thai red rice and a poor quality rice originating from China contained between 300 to 1000 cells/g and 104 to 2×105 cells/g, respectively. Nine strains produced an enterotoxin responsible for the diarrhoeal-type B. cereus food poisoning and seven of these strains also produced a haemolysin (haemolysin BL), a dermonecrotic vascular permeability factor which may be a virulence determinant in diarrhoeal illness caused by this bacterium.P.K. Lee and J.A. Buswell are with the Department of Biology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong; K. Shinagawa is with the Department of Veterinary Medicine, Iwate University, Iwate, Japan. |