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      Acanthamoeba castellanii : growth on human cell layers reactivates attenuated properties after prolonged axenic culture

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          Abstract

          The free-living, but potentially pathogenic, bacteriovorous amoebae of the genus Acanthamoeba can be easily grown axenically in a laboratory culture. This, however, often leads to considerable losses in virulence, and encystment capacity, and to changes in drug susceptibility. We evaluated potential options for a reactivation of a number of physiological properties, attenuated by prolonged axenic laboratory culture, including encystment potential, protease activity, heat resistance, growth rates and drug susceptibility against N-chlorotaurine (NCT). Toward this end, a strain that had been grown axenically for 10 years was repeatedly passaged on human HEp-2 cell monolayers or treated with 5′-azacytidine (AzaC), a methyltransferase inhibitor, and trichostatin A (TSA), a histone deacetylase inhibitor, in order to uplift epigenetic gene regulation. Culture on human cell monolayers resulted in significantly enhanced encystment potentials and protease activities, and higher susceptibility against NCT, whereas the resistance against heat shock was not altered. Treatment with AzaC/TSA resulted in increased encystment rates and protease activities, indicating the participation of epigenetic mechanisms. However, lowered resistances against heat shock indicate that possible stress responses to AzaC/TSA have to be taken into account. Repeated growth on human cell monolayers appears to be a potential method to reactivate attenuated characteristics in Acanthamoeba.

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          Most cited references34

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          Histones and histone modifications.

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            Cultivation of pathogenic and opportunistic free-living amebas.

            Free-living amebas are widely distributed in soil and water, particularly members of the genera Acanthamoeba and NAEGLERIA: Since the early 1960s, they have been recognized as opportunistic human pathogens, capable of causing infections of the central nervous system (CNS) in both immunocompetent and immunocompromised hosts. Naegleria is the causal agent of a fulminant CNS condition, primary amebic meningoencephalitis; Acanthamoeba is responsible for a more chronic and insidious infection of the CNS termed granulomatous amebic encephalitis, as well as amebic keratitis. Balamuthia sp. has been recognized in the past decade as another ameba implicated in CNS infections. Cultivation of these organisms in vitro provides the basis for a better understanding of the biology of these amebas, as well as an important means of isolating and identifying them from clinical samples. Naegleria and Acanthamoeba can be cultured axenically in cell-free media or on tissue culture cells as feeder layers and in cultures with bacteria as a food source. Balamuthia, which has yet to be isolated from the environment, will not grow on bacteria. Instead, it requires tissue culture cells as feeder layers or an enriched cell-free medium. The recent identification of another ameba, Sappinia diploidea, suggests that other free-living forms may also be involved as causal agents of human infections.
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              Common themes in mechanisms of gene silencing.

              D Moazed (2001)
              The assembly of DNA into regions of inaccessible chromatin, called silent chromatin, is involved in the regulation of gene expression and maintenance of chromosome stability in eukaryotes. Recent studies on Sir2-containing silencing complexes in budding yeast and HP1- and Swi6-containing silencing complexes in metazoans and fission yeast suggest a common mechanism for the assembly of these domains, which involves the physical coupling of histone modifying enzymes to histone binding proteins.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                FEMS Microbiol Lett
                fml
                Fems Microbiology Letters
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd
                0378-1097
                1574-6968
                October 2009
                : 299
                : 2
                : 121-127
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleDepartment of Medical Parasitology, Clinical Institute of Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Medical University of Vienna Vienna, Austria
                [2 ]simpleDepartment of Specific Prophylaxis and Tropical Medicine, Center for Physiology, Pathophysiology and Immunology, Medical University of Vienna Vienna, Austria
                [3 ]simpleDepartment of Hygiene, Microbiology and Social Medicine, Division of Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Innsbruck Medical University Innsbruck, Austria
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Julia Walochnik, Department of Medical Parasitology, Clinical Institute of Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Medical University of Vienna, Kinderspitalgasse 15, A-1095 Vienna, Austria. Tel.: +43 1 40490 79446; fax: +43 1 40490 79435; e-mail: julia.walochnik@ 123456meduniwien.ac.at
                Article
                10.1111/j.1574-6968.2009.01680.x
                2810444
                19732153
                9eb91d02-e7e7-46e8-91db-d054e74ee14e
                © 2009 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

                History
                : 20 March 2009
                : 15 May 2009
                Categories
                Research Letters

                Microbiology & Virology
                acanthamoeba,encystment,protease,axenic culture,n-chlorotaurine
                Microbiology & Virology
                acanthamoeba, encystment, protease, axenic culture, n-chlorotaurine

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