Bacillus
Bacillus anthracis
Bacillus cereus
Bacillus thuringiensis
Bacillus subtilis
Bacillus coagulans
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The word
bacillus is a descriptive term for the appearance of certain bacteria when viewed microscopically.
It derives from the Latin for "staff" and means "rod-shaped".
A
Gram stain allows one to distinguish between
cocci (round) and bacilli (rod-shaped) bacteria, as well as between
Gram-positive and
Gram-negative bacteria (the former are stained purple, the latter red).
In this sense, bacilli can be either Gram-positive or Gram-negative.
When capitalized and italicized,
Bacillus is also the name given to a
genus of rod-shaped, Gram positive,
aerobic bacteria belonging to the family Bacillaceae among the
Firmicutes. The name Bacilli, capitalized, is also used as the name of its class.
Bacillus bacteria are ubiquitous in nature and can form roughly spherical
spores when conditions are stressful in order to survive in a dormant state for extended periods.
There exist a huge number of species in this genus, most of which
are harmless.
The two species considered medically significant are
Bacillus anthracis (which causes
anthrax)
and
Bacillus cereus (which can cause a form of
foodborne illness similar to that of
Staphylococcus). Two species that are notable food spoilers are
Bacillus subtilis and
Bacillus coagulans.
B. subtilis is an
obligate aerobe whose spores can survive the extreme heating which is often used to cook food. It is responsible for causing ropiness in spoiled
bread.
B. coagulans can grow all the way down to
pH 4.2 and causes a flat sour taste in contaminated canned food (including
acidic foods which normally keeps most bacterial growth to a minimum).
Bacillus are gram and
catalase positive bacteria who use
oxygen as their terminal electron acceptor in their energy
metabolic pathway. Individual
Bacillus appear as rods under the
microscope with usually a substantial number of the rods having an oval
endospore which tends to bulge the bacterium at one end. Colonies of this genus are usually are observed as large, spreading and irregularly-shaped.
An easy way to isolate a
Bacillus species is by placing non-sterile soil in a
test tube with water, shake, place in melted mannitol salts agar, and incubate at room temperature for at least a day.