Abstract

The injection of 1 × 10 6 trophozoites of axenically grown Entamoeba histolytica strain HM-1 in the subcutaneous tissue of the rat results in an acute and self-limited inflammatory process, characterized by the early onset of conspicuous tissue necrosis and focal hemorrhage in the vicinity of the parasites, followed by infiltration with polymorphonuclear leukocytes. The process develops for 5–10 hr but during that period amebic trophozoites progressively disappear, leukocytes undergo degenerative changes, and the lesion tends to heal in 72–96 hr. In leukopenic animals (<1000 white blood cells/ml) tissue necrosis and hemorrhage are equally conspicuous in the neighborhood of amebas. Inhibition of amebic proteinase activity prior to injection by heat denaturation, p-hydroxy-mercuri-benzoate (PHMB), soybean trypsin inhibitor (STI), and human α-2-macroglobulin (α2M), alone or in various combinations, results in absence or notorious decrease in tissue necrosis as well as in clearly diminished inflammatory reaction. This effect is particularly evident when cysteine proteinases are either specifically or generally inhibited. On the other hand, amebic proteinase inhibition with α2M and STI does not interfere with the cell-killing capacity of trophozoites co-incubated in vitro for 2 hr with rat peritoneal cells enriched for macrophages. We conclude that in acute experimental amebiasis produced in the subcutaneous tissue of the rat, amebic cysteine (and perhaps other) proteinases are primarily responsible for necrosis and are also important, but not essential, for inflammation. We also suggest that in this model polymorphonuclear leukocytes are not required for tissue necrosis. Finally, in an in vitro model, the cell-killing capacity of amebas is not influenced by the proteinase activity of the parasite.

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