Abstract

Entamoeba histolytica is a parasitic protozoan that causes amoebic dysentery, which affects approximately 90 million people each year worldwide. E. histolytica is transmitted through ingestion of food and water contaminated with the cyst form, which undergoes excystation in the small intestine to the trophozoite form that colonizes the large intestine. The reptile pathogen Entamoeba invadens has served as a model for studying stage conversion between the trophozoite and cyst form due to lack of reproducible encystation of E. histolytica in the laboratory. Although much has been learned about encystation and excystation using E. invadens, the findings do not fully translate to E. histolytica due to the extensive genetic and host differences between these species. Here, we present the first reproducible encystation of E. histolytica in vitro. The cysts produced were viable and displayed the four characteristic hallmarks: round shape, chitinous cell wall, tetranucleation, and detergent resistance. Using flow cytometry analysis, glucose limitation and high cell density were key for encystation, as for E. invadens. Entry into encystation was enhanced by the short-chain fatty acids acetate and propionate, unlike for E. invadens. This new model will now allow the further study of E. histolytica stage conversion, transmission, and treatment.

Highlights

  • Entamoeba histolytica is a protozoan parasite of humans that is the causative agent of amoebic dysentery

  • Encystation in E. invadens is routinely induced by growth at high cell density under nutrient stress in hypo-osmotic conditions

  • We have developed the first reproducible method for encystation of E. histolytica in

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Summary

Introduction

Entamoeba histolytica is a protozoan parasite of humans that is the causative agent of amoebic dysentery. This pathogen is common in tropical areas in developing nations with poor sanitation [1,2], and approximately 90 million people worldwide experience symptomatic disease from E. histolytica infection each year [2]. This is thought to represent just a fraction of infections though, as an estimated 90% of people infected with. Symptomatic infections typically present as amoebic dysentery but can result in amoebic liver abscesses that can be deadly if left untreated [4,10,11]

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