Bacillus cereus represents a major concern for the microbiological safety of plant-based foods due to its ability to form heat-resistant spores and produce toxins associated with foodborne illness. Rapid, field-adapted tools for toxin gene detection are, therefore, needed to support surveillance and safety management. In this study, Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP) assays targeting the emetic (cesA) and enterotoxigenic (hblD, nheB, cytK-1) genes of B. cereus were developed and their performance in plant-based products was evaluated. LAMP primer sets using qPCR equipment (qLAMP) were assessed for sensitivity and specificity with a diverse strain panel. Analytical sensitivity was also tested in spiked plant-based matrices. Seventy-two commercial plantbased foods and supplements, including dairy, meat, and fish analogues, were screened by colorimetric assays, with inconclusive samples subsequently analysed via qLAMP. No amplification occurred with non-Bacillus DNA. hblD, nheB, and cytK-1 assays showed 100% specificity to reference assignments, while cesA assay generated one apparent false positive. All assays successfully amplified target DNA in spiked matrices even at the lowest level of 101 spores × mL-1. The colorimetric analysis of commercial products showed mostly clearly positive (yellow) or negative (red) results. Some intermediate (orange) signals were confirmed by qLAMP as very low-level positives, while others showed no amplification. Among detected genes, nheB was the most frequent, followed by hblD, cytK-1, and cesA. Overall, LAMP assays provide rapid, sensitive, and specific detection of B. cereus toxin genes. The colorimetric method represents an effective first-line screening tool for plant-based foods, with qLAMP confirmation recommended for ambiguous results.
Bisaschi, M., Fontana, A., Callegari, M. L., Del Casale, A., Morelli, L., Lamas, A., Prado, M., Patrone, V., Development of fluorescence and colorimetric LAMP-based assays for rapid and sensitive detection of toxigenic Bacillus cereus group strains in plant-based products, <<FOOD CONTROL>>, 2026; 187 (112113): 1-12. [doi:10.1016/j.foodcont.2026.112113] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/332337]
Development of fluorescence and colorimetric LAMP-based assays for rapid and sensitive detection of toxigenic Bacillus cereus group strains in plant-based products
Bisaschi, MartaPrimo
;Fontana, AlessandraSecondo
;Callegari, Maria Luisa;Morelli, Lorenzo;Patrone, VaniaUltimo
2026
Abstract
Bacillus cereus represents a major concern for the microbiological safety of plant-based foods due to its ability to form heat-resistant spores and produce toxins associated with foodborne illness. Rapid, field-adapted tools for toxin gene detection are, therefore, needed to support surveillance and safety management. In this study, Loop-Mediated Isothermal Amplification (LAMP) assays targeting the emetic (cesA) and enterotoxigenic (hblD, nheB, cytK-1) genes of B. cereus were developed and their performance in plant-based products was evaluated. LAMP primer sets using qPCR equipment (qLAMP) were assessed for sensitivity and specificity with a diverse strain panel. Analytical sensitivity was also tested in spiked plant-based matrices. Seventy-two commercial plantbased foods and supplements, including dairy, meat, and fish analogues, were screened by colorimetric assays, with inconclusive samples subsequently analysed via qLAMP. No amplification occurred with non-Bacillus DNA. hblD, nheB, and cytK-1 assays showed 100% specificity to reference assignments, while cesA assay generated one apparent false positive. All assays successfully amplified target DNA in spiked matrices even at the lowest level of 101 spores × mL-1. The colorimetric analysis of commercial products showed mostly clearly positive (yellow) or negative (red) results. Some intermediate (orange) signals were confirmed by qLAMP as very low-level positives, while others showed no amplification. Among detected genes, nheB was the most frequent, followed by hblD, cytK-1, and cesA. Overall, LAMP assays provide rapid, sensitive, and specific detection of B. cereus toxin genes. The colorimetric method represents an effective first-line screening tool for plant-based foods, with qLAMP confirmation recommended for ambiguous results.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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