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1                                              B. cereus and B. thuringiensis sigP and rsiP homologues
2                                              B. cereus and B. thuringiensis, species closely related
3                                              B. cereus endophthalmitis followed a more rapid and viru
4                                              B. cereus G9241 also harbors S-layer genes, including ho
5                                              B. cereus G9241 encodes two megaplasmids, pBCXO1 and pBC
6                                              B. cereus G9241 was avirulent in New Zealand rabbits aft
7                                              B. cereus induced the leakage of albumin and fibrin into
8                                              B. cereus infection of polarized RPE cell monolayers res
9                                              B. cereus replicated more rapidly in the eyes of TNFalph
10                                              B. cereus SDP6 was able to degrade alkali lignin (55.74%
11                                              B. cereus strain G9241 expresses anthrax toxin, several
12                               Kurstaki HD-1, B. cereus T, and the nonpathogenic strain B. anthracis S
13        Three isolates, Bacillus cereus D-17, B. cereus 43881, and Bacillus thuringiensis 33679, conta
14 ing a comparative genome hybridization of 19 B. cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis strains against a B
15 n time equal to 3 h and absence of MgCl(2)), B. cereus spores 14579 were detected with a linear range
16 nome sequencing of B. thuringiensis 97-27and B. cereus E33L was undertaken to identify shared and uni
17 asensor was developed, it was tested against B. cereus spores 14579 evaluating the effect of incubati
18   Here we used a genetic approach to analyze B. cereus G9241 S-layer assembly and function.
19 ith the HF-PSs from B. cereus ATCC 10987 and B. cereus ATCC 14579 showed that the B. anthracis struct
20 npathogenic strains B. cereus ATCC 10987 and B. cereus ATCC 14579.
21  of pathogenic strains B. anthracis Ames and B. cereus G9241 and nonpathogenic strains B. cereus ATCC
22 llagen-like regions of both B. anthracis and B. cereus are similarly substituted by short O-glycans t
23 tiological agent of the disease anthrax) and B. cereus, a cause of food poisoning.
24 .typhimurium, E. coli O157:H7, S. aureus and B. cereus) with an average accuracy of 97.72% and a dete
25 aeruginosa, L. monocytogenes, S. aureus, and B. cereus) and fungal growth (A. brasiliensis, R. stolon
26 isms such as B. anthracis, C. botulinum, and B. cereus, which can to be used for method validation, i
27 drug resistance in both Escherichia coli and B. cereus.
28 x toxins as well as hyaluronic acid (HA) and B. cereus exopolysaccharide (BPS) capsules.
29                                Kurstaki, and B. cereus T, respectively.
30 lated Bacillus species, B. licheniformis and B. cereus, indicating that the biofilm-promoting effect
31 ivity against strains of S. aureus, MRSA and B. cereus (MIC=187.5-365mug/ml).
32 thuringiensis, and B. atrophaeus spores, and B. cereus vegetative cells were investigated by Raman im
33 ormally occurs in Bacillus thuringiensis and B. cereus can be mimicked by tethering the peptide to Pl
34 including E. coli type IA topoisomerases and B. cereus topoisomerase I (bcTopo I) and IIIalpha (bcTop
35  (a FO analog) is bound by YxeB in vitro and B. cereus imports or binds Cr-DFO in vivo.
36 4, isolated from a necrotic human wound, and B. cereus E33L, which was isolated from a swab of a zebr
37 d on MLST, we selected several B. anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis strains and compared the
38  bla1 is poorly transcribed in B. anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis.
39 ene was used to genotype Bacillus anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis isolates.
40 This is the tightest binding observed of any B. cereus siderophore-binding protein.
41             In contrast, exogenously applied B. cereus sphingomyelinase, despite causing higher eleva
42 nly one strain, which was later confirmed as B. cereus, gave a positive result.
43 16S rRNA analysis identified this isolate as B. cereus, the rapid generation and analysis of a high-c
44 dentify the genes that are conserved between B. cereus and B. anthracis, and the genes that are uniqu
45  differences in virulence regulation between B. cereus and B. anthracis.
46 omplete release of endogenous CaDPA for both B. cereus and B. subtilis spores; (3) the rate but not t
47 led large potential plasmids present in both B. cereus 43881 (341 kb) and B. thuringiensis ATCC 33679
48 tance determinant that is functional in both B. cereus and E. coli.
49               A case of bacteremia caused by B. cereus in a 19-day-old preterm neonate who was succes
50 reduce the occurrence of outbreaks caused by B. cereus, C. perfringens, and S. aureus in the United S
51 ve bacterium to both ZEO or MEO, followed by B. cereus and E. coli.
52                                 Hemolysis by B. cereus results largely from the action of phosphatidy
53                     Decolourization of MB by B. cereus SDP6 best fitted with the pseudo-second-order
54 iofilm matrix-inducing compounds produced by B. cereus.
55 (QTL) associated with disease suppression by B. cereus explained 38% of the phenotypic variation amon
56 In two cases, QTL for disease suppression by B. cereus map to the same locations as QTL for other tra
57 ance to P. torulosum, disease suppression by B. cereus, and growth of B. cereus on the seed.
58  by bio- silver nanoparticles synthesized by B. cereus Nem 212 filtrate.
59 < 0.05) activity against S. aureus, E. coli, B. cereus and C. sakazakii.
60 nomic DNAs of three microorganisms: E. coli, B. cereus, and M. neoaurum.
61 type, nonswarming, and swarming-complemented B. cereus strains grew to a similar number in the vitreo
62 ng growth under capsule-inducing conditions, B. cereus G9241 assembled BSLs (BslA and BslO) and the S
63                   Here we fractionated crude B. cereus culture supernatant by anion-exchange chromato
64 d with wild-type or quorum-sensing-deficient B. cereus, and cytotoxicity was analyzed.
65 ay be used as a suitable biosensor to detect B. cereus and to become a portable system for food quali
66 ated the capability of this sensor to detect B. cereus spores, proving the suitability of the DNA-bas
67 or the sap gene from either of two different B. cereus strains that are sensitive to AP50c infection
68  directed genome sequencing of seven diverse B. cereus strains to identify novel sequences encoded in
69 hesized that intraocular inflammation during B. cereus endophthalmitis would be controlled by MyD88-
70 pathways, contributed to inflammation during B. cereus endophthalmitis.
71        Residual inflammation observed during B. cereus endophthalmitis in TLR2(-/-) mice led us to in
72 ng a multicopy plasmid containing the entire B. cereus plc-sph operon.
73 zation of two clinical and one environmental B. cereus isolate collected during an investigation of t
74                                 Experimental B. cereus endophthalmitis was induced in wild-type contr
75 ogen containment by PMNs during experimental B. cereus endophthalmitis.
76 h or without dexamethasone, for experimental B. cereus endophthalmitis.
77 flammatory response observed in experimental B. cereus endophthalmitis, identifying a novel innate im
78 curs during the early stages of experimental B. cereus endophthalmitis, beginning as early as 4 hours
79 e overall course or severity of experimental B. cereus endophthalmitis.
80 ted clones provided useful markers to follow B. cereus populations on plant surfaces.
81 ned a miniaturized label-free aptasensor for B. cereus spores based on a gold screen-printed electrod
82 han the minimal inhibitory concentration for B. cereus when measured at 8 hours.
83 nsis (BT) isolates, and one isolate each for B. cereus (BC), B. mycoides (BM), B. atrophaeus (BG), an
84 bly other roundworms can be common hosts for B. cereus-group bacteria, findings with important ecolog
85 ifying a novel innate immune interaction for B. cereus and for this disease.
86 ore, attempts to develop a robust method for B. cereus detection by leveraging the highly specific py
87  plcR-regulated toxins were not required for B. cereus-induced RPE cytotoxicity, but these toxins did
88                     However, the LD(50)s for B. cereus G9241 in both mouse strains were markedly high
89       We also analyzed 30 gyrB sequences for B. cereus group strains with published 16S rRNA sequence
90  of B. thuringiensis that sets it apart from B. cereus and B. anthracis is the production of crystal
91 thuringiensis are readily distinguished from B. cereus by the presence of plasmid-borne specific toxi
92 29000 clones containing chromosomal DNA from B. cereus strain UW85.
93 a corresponding fragment of genomic DNA from B. cereus UW85.
94 he three isolates was indistinguishable from B. cereus G9241.
95 structure of the metallo-beta-lactamase from B. cereus.
96 cin A, we constructed a genomic library from B. cereus UW85, which produces zwittermicin A, and scree
97              In this study the plasmids from B. cereus isolates that produce emetic toxin or are link
98  structural data obtained for the HF-PS from B. cereus type strain ATCC 14579 revealed that each HF-P
99 common structural feature in the HF-PSs from B. cereus ATCC 10987 and B. anthracis was the presence o
100              Comparison with the HF-PSs from B. cereus ATCC 10987 and B. cereus ATCC 14579 showed tha
101 atic characterization of PC-PLC and SPH from B. cereus and B. anthracis.
102  against a lethal challenge with spores from B. cereus G9241 or B. cereus Elc4, a strain that had bee
103          Deletion of the Vb beta-strand from B. cereus PI-PLC abolished its ability to cleave GPI-anc
104 ttermicin A self-resistance gene, zmaR, from B. cereus UW85 revealed three open reading frames (ORFs)
105                                 Furthermore, B. cereus G9241 spores could germinate and disseminate a
106  results showed that up to 3.51 log(10)CFU/g B. cereus spore inactivation was achieved with 8 kGy of
107 included cells in the same domain and genus, B. cereus versus Bacillus subtilis.
108     The spores of the Bacillus cereus group (B. cereus, Bacillus anthracis, and Bacillus thuringiensi
109  most common species of the B. cereus group, B. cereus, Bacillus thuringiensis, and Bacillus mycoides
110                      pBC218 harbours bpsX-H, B. cereus exo-polysaccharide, which produce a second cap
111 lated to each other than to other identified B. cereus plasmids.
112                                           In B. cereus, PlcR was found to be a positive regulator of
113                                           In B. cereus, these genes are organized in an operon regula
114 ty and differences in functional activity in B. cereus RC607 and after cloning of the mer determinant
115  an important role for these TLR adaptors in B. cereus endophthalmitis.
116 glucosaminidase function that is apparent in B. cereus/B. anthracis.
117 of the petrobactin and bacillibactin BGCs in B. cereus, suggesting that koreenceine represses siderop
118 ted assembly of S-layer proteins and BSLs in B. cereus G9241 contributes to the pathogenesis of anthr
119 microbial therapies; its characterization in B. cereus is described here.
120       The bla2 gene is strongly expressed in B. cereus and B. thuringiensis and weakly expressed in B
121 8 clones) was screened for GFP expression in B. cereus UW85 using a 96-well microtiter dish assay.
122 itive mutants and that zmaR is functional in B. cereus.
123                   These enzymes and genes in B. cereus are nearly identical to those in the very clos
124                   Here, we show two genes in B. cereus ATCC 14579 encoding enzymes involved in the sy
125  and rice dishes were commonly implicated in B. cereus outbreaks (50%).
126 . subtilis spores and > or =20-fold lower in B. cereus and B. megaterium spores.
127 robactin, and other secondary metabolites in B. cereus and F. johnsoniae, whereas the BGC transcripti
128 oreover, we identified a four-gene operon in B. cereus ATCC 14579 that encodes proteins with the foll
129 psule-encoding plasmids pBCXO1 and pBC218 in B. cereus G9241 alone is insufficient to render the stra
130            Vomiting was commonly reported in B. cereus (median, 75% of cases) and S. aureus outbreaks
131                       This Vb beta-strand in B. cereus PI-PLC forms contacts with the glycan linker o
132 es, indicating an important role for TLR4 in B. cereus endophthalmitis.
133 suggested to be associated with virulence in B. cereus and B. anthracis, respectively.
134 s, or S. aureus, (ii) metabolically inactive B. cereus, E. faecalis, or S. aureus, (iii) sacculus pre
135 actors within the B. cereus group, including B. cereus, B. anthracis, and B. thuringiensis.
136 several human and plant pathogens, including B. cereus, B. anthracis, and B. thuringiensis.
137 lease (T(release)) of hundreds of individual B. cereus spores germinating with both saturating and su
138                            During infection, B. cereus G9241 elaborates both hasACB and bpsX-H capsul
139                       In one such infection, B. cereus G9241 was identified as the causative agent of
140  including Bacillus anthracis (11 isolates), B. cereus (38 isolates), Bacillus mycoides (1 isolate),
141                                      Lastly, B. cereus G9241 derivatives cured of one or both megapla
142                                Although most B. cereus isolates are not opportunistic pathogens and o
143                         Wild-type and mutant B. cereus sterile supernatants induced blood-ocular barr
144                      A quorum-sensing mutant B. cereus strain caused BRB permeability comparable to t
145 the results of detailed study of three novel B. cereus phages, two highly related myoviruses (JL and
146 e 1 comprised B. anthracis strains, numerous B. cereus strains, and rare B. thuringiensis strains, wh
147 ymorphism within a collection of over 300 of B. cereus, B. thuringiensis, and B. anthracis isolates,
148         The beta-galactosidase activities of B. cereus group species harboring bla promoter-lacZ tran
149                    Northern blot analysis of B. cereus RNA showed a 5.5-kb transcript which hybridize
150 e apparent among the different categories of B. cereus (isolates from food poisoning incidents and no
151 ts with severe pneumonia, in a collection of B. cereus isolates associated with human illness.
152 he biosensor sensitivity in pure cultures of B. cereus was found to be 10(0) colony forming units per
153  strong potential for the decontamination of B. cereus in mesquite flour.
154                                 Detection of B. cereus was carried out based on an increase in the ch
155  of this study was to analyze the effects of B. cereus infection and plcR-regulated toxins on the bar
156 sults demonstrate the deleterious effects of B. cereus infection on RPE barrier function and suggest
157                     High level expression of B. cereus BioC in E. coli blocked cell growth and fatty
158 ine the extent of heterologous expression of B. cereus genes in the library, we screened it for expre
159 ExsM, from a beta-mercaptoethanol extract of B. cereus ATCC 4342 spores.
160 cting relatedness among microbial genomes of B. cereus group members and potentially may circumvent t
161 ease suppression by B. cereus, and growth of B. cereus on the seed.
162    Upon stable transfection and induction of B. cereus sphingomyelinase, there were increases in neut
163                                 Injection of B. cereus or S. aureus culture fluids caused both signif
164 ) CFU of either a clinical ocular isolate of B. cereus producing hemolysin BL (HBL+) or an isogenic m
165 uence homogeneity, environmental isolates of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis exhibit extensive genetic
166 erminal end of the type II beta-lactamase of B. cereus.
167 ral protein of the exosporium basal layer of B. cereus family spores and that it can self-assemble in
168                                 Migration of B. cereus throughout the eye during endophthalmitis is a
169            Expression by L. monocytogenes of B. cereus PI-PLC, which has strong activity on GPI-ancho
170 ng fragments were not detected in mutants of B. cereus UW85 that were sensitive to zwittermicin A, an
171 floxacin improved the therapeutic outcome of B. cereus endophthalmitis.
172                       As the pathogenesis of B. cereus anthrax-like disease in mice is dependent on p
173  toxin, hemolysin BL, to the pathogenesis of B. cereus infection in an endophthalmitis system that is
174  walls all contribute to the pathogenesis of B. cereus, S. aureus, and E. faecalis endophthalmitis in
175 hrax may be important in the pathogenesis of B. cereus.
176  their contributions to the pathogenicity of B. cereus group bacteria.
177                 Screening of a population of B. cereus group isolates revealed that pXO1-like plasmid
178                              The presence of B. cereus strains in six of the seven subgroups and the
179 y signals were detectable in the presence of B. cereus, but not for other species.
180 findings suggest a new mode of regulation of B. cereus virulence and reveal intriguing similarities a
181 nce typing (MLST) refined the relatedness of B. cereus group members by separating them into clades a
182              The complete genome sequence of B. cereus ATCC 14579 together with the gapped genome of
183 ecifically detect the target DNA sequence of B. cereus from other bacteria that can be found in dairy
184  analysis based on whole-genome sequences of B. cereus sensu lato strains revealed several closely re
185  as well as aerosol challenge with spores of B. cereus G9241, harboring pBCXO1 and pBC218 virulence p
186 Three recently identified clade 1 strains of B. cereus that caused severe pneumonia, i.e., strains 03
187 th 33 strains of B. anthracis, 27 strains of B. cereus, and 9 strains of B. thuringiensis.
188 warming, or swarming-complemented strains of B. cereus.
189   Four high resolution crystal structures of B. cereus PPM revealed the active site architecture, ide
190 ovide virulence factors, making the study of B. cereus phages important to understanding the evolutio
191 7 HF-PS structure was different from that of B. cereus ATCC 14579.
192 s do not support the proposed unification of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis into one species.
193 ly injected with 100 colony-forming units of B. cereus, and eyes were analyzed at specific times afte
194 ravitreally with 100 colony-forming units of B. cereus.
195                             The virulence of B. cereus endophthalmitis historically has been attribut
196           Here we evaluated the virulence of B. cereus G9241 as well as the contributions of pBCXO1 a
197 owever, like B. anthracis, full virulence of B. cereus G9241 for mice requires the presence of both p
198 he formation of cereose-containing glycan on B. cereus spores.
199 four other phage loci in B. anthracis and/or B. cereus lysogens.
200 hallenge with spores from B. cereus G9241 or B. cereus Elc4, a strain that had been isolated from a f
201 rulence plasmids have been acquired by other B. cereus strains and enable the pathogenesis of anthrax
202 the pXO1-like plasmids may define pathogenic B. cereus isolates in the same way that pXO1 and pXO2 de
203            B. anthracis and other pathogenic B. cereus isolates harbor genes for the secretion of S-l
204 ystems limited the growth of some pathogens (B. cereus, L. monocytogenes, S. aureus), phytopathogens
205 the NLRP3 inflammasome using MCC950 prevents B. cereus-induced lethality.
206                   Furthermore, HBL-producing B. cereus induces rapid inflammasome-mediated mortality.
207            The potent diphosphonates reduced B. cereus-mediated detachment and death of cells and Gal
208 ato strains revealed several closely related B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains that carry sap ge
209 ltures, respectively, of its close relatives B. cereus, B. thuringiensis, and B. mycoides derived fro
210 re than 150 nucleotide differences separated B. cereus and B. mycoides from B. anthracis in pairwise
211 metry and cell sorting efficiently separated B. cereus cells expressing GFP from a 10000-fold excess
212 -M) system genes is presented from sequenced B. cereus, Bacillus anthracis, and Bacillus thuringiensi
213 itutions in the chromosome; however, several B. cereus genomes isolated from soil and not previously
214 ry, we screened it for expression of several B. cereus activities in the E. coli host.
215 ep detection of B. anthracis spore simulant (B. cereus spore).
216 or the other species, although just a single B. cereus strain was fully resistant.
217  resistant to tetracycline and a further six B. cereus and one B. thuringiensis cultures fell into th
218 pecific to B. anthracis was detected in some B. cereus strains.
219 lnesses, these results demonstrate that some B. cereus strains can cause severe and even fatal infect
220  B. thuringiensis strains together with some B. cereus strains.
221 nes genetically to identify rapidly specific B. cereus loci.
222 e sequencing and analysis of the type strain B. cereus ATCC 14579.
223  a rare susceptible non-B. anthracis strain, B. cereus ATCC 4342.
224 nd B. cereus G9241 and nonpathogenic strains B. cereus ATCC 10987 and B. cereus ATCC 14579.
225 ntrast, the cell walls from clade 2 strains (B. cereus type strain ATCC 14579 and B. thuringiensis st
226 e from 2 to 6.8 mum, three bacteria strains (B. cereus, E. coli, and S. enterica) and a yeast cell (S
227                                Surprisingly, B. cereus-infected TLR4(-/-) eyes also had significantly
228 istic to each other in inhibiting the target B. cereus UW85, displaying weaker inhibitory activity wh
229  on the non-host plant Arabidopsis thaliana, B. cereus PK6-15, B. subtilis PK5-26 and B. circulans PK
230                    We have demonstrated that B. cereus ATCC 14579 takes up (55)Fe radiolabeled ferric
231                      We also determined that B. cereus produces additional retinal toxins that might
232                                 We find that B. cereus Shedu cleaves near DNA ends with a 3' single-s
233                          We report here that B. cereus G9241 causes anthrax-like disease in immune-co
234          These cases are interesting in that B. cereus, even from blood or sputum specimens, may ofte
235 cters (polymorphic fragments) indicates that B. cereus and B. thuringiensis are the closest taxa to B
236              The present study revealed that B. cereus SDP6 is a non-pathogenic and non-antibiotic-re
237 ysis of bacterial localization revealed that B. cereus uniquely migrated rapidly from posterior to an
238 growth assays using DFO and Cr-DFO show that B. cereus selectively imports and uses FO when DFO is pr
239                              We suggest that B. cereus and its close relatives, easily isolated from
240                                          The B. cereus clade 1 strains had cell walls that were simil
241                                          The B. cereus E33L isolate appears to be the nearest relativ
242                                          The B. cereus G9241 csaB mutant assembled capsular polysacch
243 ected in B. anthracis strains containing the B. cereus plcR gene on a multicopy plasmid under control
244                 The core genome size for the B. cereus s.l. group was approximately 1750 genes, with
245 illus cereus ATCC 10987 strain, and from the B. cereus ATCC 14579 type strain and compared with those
246 ow that a related endolysin (Ply21) from the B. cereus phage, TP21, shows a similar pattern of behavi
247       The protein sequence inferred from the B. cereus phosphonatase gene was determined, and this se
248 l other protein biomarkers isolated from the B. cereus T spores.
249 chiff base mechanism known to operate in the B. cereus enzyme was verified for the S. typhimurium enz
250 nc content to mimic that which occurs in the B. cereus enzyme.
251 ndidates that most likely play a role in the B. cereus group pathogenicity.
252 . anthracis from other microorganisms in the B. cereus group.
253 74 23S rRNA sequences for all species in the B. cereus group.
254                         Transcription of the B. cereus and B. thuringiensis CDC genes is controlled b
255                                  Four of the B. cereus and one of the B. thuringiensis cultures were
256 t found in the di- and monozinc forms of the B. cereus enzyme (12 and 6 s(-)(1), respectively).
257 s library provides 5.75-fold coverage of the B. cereus genome, with an average insert size of 98 kb.
258                   This classification of the B. cereus group conflicts with current taxonomic groupin
259 , which is a biomarker characteristic of the B. cereus group of bacteria, was determined from a fragm
260  an abundant outer spore coat protein of the B. cereus group with a prominent role in spore resistanc
261 ed that the three most common species of the B. cereus group, B. cereus, Bacillus thuringiensis, and
262 nalysis of the genomes of two members of the B. cereus group, B. thuringiensis 97-27 subsp. konkukian
263  siderophore produced by many members of the B. cereus group, including B. anthracis.
264 Structural and functional examination of the B. cereus metA protein reveals that a single amino acid
265     Surprisingly, functional analysis of the B. cereus metA protein shows that it does not use succin
266 model for the kinetically active form of the B. cereus metalloenzyme is proposed.
267                            Expression of the B. cereus or B. thuringiensis sigP and rsiP genes in a B
268                           Replacement of the B. cereus plcR gene by its truncated orthologue from B.
269 hereas introduction into B. anthracis of the B. cereus plcR gene with its own promoter did not activa
270                          Some members of the B. cereus sensu lato group produce CDP-3-C-methyl-6-deox
271 gram-positive, spore-forming bacteria of the B. cereus sensu lato group.
272 w insights to the successful survival of the B. cereus species in natural environments or in the host
273                  The results showed that the B. cereus ATCC 10987 HF-PS has a repeating oligosacchari
274 h of these HF-PSs and, furthermore, that the B. cereus ATCC 10987 HF-PS structure was different from
275 is of site-directed mutants reveals that the B. cereus metA protein and the E. coli HTS share a commo
276                               Therefore, the B. cereus metA protein functions as an HTA despite great
277                  However, Btk belongs to the B. cereus group, some strains of which are well known hu
278 to encode a protein with 92% identity to the B. cereus type II enzyme.
279 he irreversible inhibition observed with the B. cereus ADI from the time controlled inhibition observ
280 ce variations, the microorganisms within the B. cereus group were divided into seven subgroups, Anthr
281  genetic transfer of such factors within the B. cereus group, including B. cereus, B. anthracis, and
282 specificity of BclA glycosylation within the B. cereus group.
283       Comparative sequence analyses of these B. cereus plasmids revealed a high degree of sequence si
284                                  Even though B. cereus and B. thuringiensis contain the ppk and ppx g
285 rescently barcoded beads to detect the three B. cereus genes.
286 ports our conclusion that HBL contributes to B. cereus virulence and implicates PC-PLC and collagenas
287 g binding of the cell wall-binding domain to B. cereus but not to other species tested.
288 ships were less consistent for resistance to B. cereus and M. robertsii.
289 ly interleukin-6 was produced in response to B. cereus infection.
290 C57BL/6J mice were comparably susceptible to B. cereus G9241 by both subcutaneous and intranasal rout
291 Furthermore, the study of selectivity toward B. cereus 11778, B. subtilis, Legionella pneumophila, an
292                        Compared to wild-type B. cereus G9241, spores with a deletion of the pBCXO1-ca
293 ally with approximately 100 CFU of wild-type B. cereus or B. thuringiensis or a plcR-deficient mutant
294 permeability comparable to that of wild-type B. cereus.
295 were injected intravitreally with (i) viable B. cereus, E. faecalis, or S. aureus, (ii) metabolically
296 ed identifications are largely due to a weak B. cereus signal in the bacterial mixtures.
297 roversial results, and it is unclear whether B. cereus, B. anthracis and B. thuringiensis are varieti
298                     A/J mice challenged with B. cereus G9241 confirmed the virulence of this strain.
299                                Compared with B. cereus populations in the PdaA(ON) state, populations
300 screen-printed electrode functionalized with B. cereus spores-binding aptamer (BAS-6R).

 
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