7. Record results obtained with the different confirmatory tests. Tentatively identify as B. cereus those isolates which 1) produce large Gram-positive rods with spores that do not swell the sporangium; 2) produce lecithinase and do not ferment mannitol on MYP agar; 3) grow and produce acid from glucose anaerobically; 4) reduce nitrate to nitrite (a few strains may be negative); 5) produce acetylmethylcarbinol (VP-positive); 6) decompose L-tyrosine; and 7) grow in the presence of 0.001% lysozyme.
These basic characteristics are shared with other members of the B. cereus group, including the rhizoid strains B. mycoides, the crystalliferous insect pathogen B. thuringiensis, and the mammalian pathogen B. anthracis. However, these species can usually be differentiated from B. cereus by determining specific characteristics typical of each species or variety. The tests described in G, below, are useful for this purpose and can easily be performed in most laboratories. Strains that produce atypical results from these tests require additional analysis before they can be classified as B. cereus.