Abstract

Bacillus cereus is a foodborne pathogen and can form biofilms on food contact surfaces, which causes food hygiene problems. While it is necessary to understand strain-dependent variation to effectively control these biofilms, strain-to-strain variation in the structure of B. cereus biofilms is poorly understood. In this study, B. cereus strains from tatsoi (BC4, BC10, and BC72) and the ATCC 10987 reference strain were incubated at 30°C to form biofilms in the presence of the extracellular matrix-degrading enzymes DNase I, proteinase K, dispase II, cellulase, amyloglucosidase, and α-amylase to assess the susceptibility to these enzymes. The four strains exhibited four different patterns in terms of biofilm susceptibility to the enzymes as well as morphology of surface-attached biofilms or suspended cell aggregates. DNase I inhibited the biofilm formation of strains ATCC 10987 and BC4 but not of strains BC10 and BC72. This result suggests that some strains may not have extracellular DNA, or their extracellular DNA may be protected in their biofilms. In addition, the strains exhibited different patterns of susceptibility to protein- and carbohydrate-degrading enzymes. While other strains were resistant, strains ATCC 10987 and BC4 were susceptible to cellulase, suggesting that cellulose or its similar polysaccharides may exist and play an essential role in their biofilm formation. Our compositional and imaging analyses of strains ATCC 10987 and BC4 suggested that the physicochemical properties of their biofilms are distinct, as calculated by the carbohydrate to protein ratio. Taken together, our study suggests that the extracellular matrix of B. cereus biofilms may be highly diverse and provides insight into the diverse mechanisms of biofilm formation among B. cereus strains.

Highlights

  • Bacillus cereus is a gram-positive and spore-forming bacterium that can cause foodborne illness

  • The B. cereus isolates with strong biofilm formation abilities included 2 food isolates, strain BC4 and strain BC10, and 1 environmental isolate

  • Strains BC4 and BC72 showed biofilm formation abilities similar to that of strain ATCC 10987 which was used as a reference strain (Fig 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

Bacillus cereus is a gram-positive and spore-forming bacterium that can cause foodborne illness. We studied six kinds of EPS-degrading enzymes, DNase I, proteinase K, dispase II, cellulase, amyloglucosidase, and α-amylase to characterize the biofilms of different B. cereus strains. The biofilms of four strains, BC4, BC10, BC72, and the reference strain, ATCC 10987, were studied in terms of their susceptibility to 6 different enzymes that degrade DNA, carbohydrates, or proteins, which generally comprise the matrix of biofilms.

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