Abstract

BackgroundThe encystation of Acanthamoeba leads to the development of resilient cysts from vegetative trophozoites. This process is essential for the survival of parasites under unfavorable conditions. Previous studies have reported that, during the encystation of A. castellanii, the expression levels of encystation-related factors are upregulated. However, the regulatory mechanisms for their expression during the encystation process remains unknown. Proteins in the sirtuin family, which consists of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-dependent deacetylases, are known to play an important role in various cellular functions. In the present study, we identified the Acanthamoeba silent-information regulator 2-like protein (AcSir2) and examined its role in the growth and encystation of Acanthamoeba.MethodsWe obtained the full-length sequence for AcSir2 using reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. In Acanthamoeba transfectants that constitutively overexpress AcSir2 protein, SIRT deacetylase activity was measured, and the intracellular localization of AcSir2 and the effects on the growth and encystation of trophozoites were examined. In addition, the sirtuin inhibitor salermide was used to determine whether these effects were caused by AcSir2 overexpressionResultsAcSir2 was classified as a class-IV sirtuin. AcSir2 exhibited functional SIRT deacetylase activity, localized mainly in the nucleus, and its transcription was upregulated during encystation. In trophozoites, AcSir2 overexpression led to greater cell growth, and this growth was inhibited by treatment with salermide, a sirtuin inhibitor. When AcSir2 was overexpressed in the cysts, the encystation rate was significantly higher; this was also reversed with salermide treatment. In AcSir2-overexpressing encysting cells, the transcription of cellulose synthase was highly upregulated compared with that of control cells, and this upregulation was abolished with salermide treatment. Transmission electron microscope-based ultrastructural analysis of salermide-treated encysting cells showed that the structure of the exocyst wall and intercyst space was impaired and that the endocyst wall had not formed.ConclusionsThese results indicate that AcSir2 is a SIRT deacetylase that plays an essential role as a regulator of a variety of cellular processes and that the regulation of AcSir2 expression is important for the growth and encystation of A. castellanii.

Highlights

  • The encystation of Acanthamoeba leads to the development of resilient cysts from vegetative trophozoites

  • Identification of the A. castellanii silent information regulator 2‐like protein In a previous study, we examined microarray data to identify genes that were differentially expressed in the trophozoite and cyst stages in A. castellanii and found a cDNA fragment that exhibited sequence homology with silent-information regulator 2 (SIR2)-like proteins [21]

  • Because a gene for SIR2-like proteins had not previously been found in Acanthamoeba spp., we searched for other SIR2-like proteins by data mining the A. castellanii genome database and found four homologues containing the conserved domain of the SIR2 family but differing in their sequence and length (AcSir2a-d; see Additional file 1: Table S1)

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Summary

Introduction

The encystation of Acanthamoeba leads to the development of resilient cysts from vegetative trophozoites. This process is essential for the survival of parasites under unfavorable conditions. During the encystation process of Acanthamoeba, many encystation-related proteins, including cyst-specific protein (CSP21) [9], various proteases [10,11,12,13], autophagy-related factors [14,15,16], and cellulose synthase [17,18,19,20], have been shown to be upregulated and to play an important role in cyst formation. How the expression of encystation-related factors is controlled during the encystation process remains unclear

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