| Literature DB >> 26696997 |
Sharmin Begum1, Jeanie Quach1, Kris Chadee1.
Abstract
Entamoeba histolytica (Eh) is a protozoan parasite that infects 10% of the world's population and results in 100,000 deaths/year from amebic dysentery and/or liver abscess. In most cases, this extracellular parasite colonizes the colon by high affinity binding to MUC2 mucin without disease symptoms, whereas in some cases, Eh triggers an aggressive inflammatory response upon invasion of the colonic mucosa. The specific host-parasite factors critical for disease pathogenesis are still not well characterized. From the parasite, the signature events that lead to disease progression are cysteine protease cleavage of the C-terminus of MUC2 that dissolves the mucus layer followed by Eh binding and cytotoxicity of the mucosal epithelium. The host mounts an ineffective excessive host pro-inflammatory response following contact with host cells that causes tissue damage and participates in disease pathogenesis as Eh escapes host immune clearance by mechanisms that are not completely understood. Ameba can modulate or destroy effector immune cells by inducing neutrophil apoptosis and suppressing respiratory burst or nitric oxide (NO) production from macrophages. Eh adherence to the host cells also induce multiple cytotoxic effects that can promote cell death through phagocytosis, apoptosis or by trogocytosis (ingestion of living cells) that might play critical roles in immune evasion. This review focuses on the immune evasion mechanisms that Eh uses to survive and induce disease manifestation in the host.Entities:
Keywords: Entamoeba histolytica; apoptosis; immune evasion; phagocytosis; trogocytosis
Year: 2015 PMID: 26696997 PMCID: PMC4678226 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2015.01394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Potential cytotoxic effector molecules identified in .
| Amebapores | Pore forming proteins | Leippe et al., |
| All three types induce pore formation in synthetic liposomes | Andrä et al., | |
| Amebapore A | Active at low pH 5.2. May play a role in host cell killing before ingestion | Andrä et al., |
| Amebapore B Amebapore C | Leippe et al., | |
| Cysteine proteinases (CPs) | At least 50 CP genes are encoded and some of them are secretory | Tillack et al., |
| Proteinases act on a variety of host substrates such as mucin, villin, laminin, collagen, proteoglycan, and extracellular matrix (ECM). It plays a role in pathogenesis by cleaving MUC mucin and ECM degradation | Li et al., | |
| Hellberg et al., | ||
| Membrane proteins: Gal/GalNAc lectin associated | 35kDa light subunit of the Gal/GalNAc lectin and surface-localized thiol-dependent peroxidase | Ankri et al., |
| Antisense inhibition of both of these prevents cell killing and deceased liver abscess | Ankri et al., | |
| Silenced by dsRNA resulted in defects in both adhesion and cytotoxicity | MacFarlane and Singh, | |
| Antisense inhibition of this protein showed defects in both adhesion and host cell killing | Shrimal et al., | |
| KERP1 (Lysine and glutamic acid rice protein 1) | Parasite membrane protein binds to host cell membrane | Santi-Rocca et al., |
| Antisense inhibition of this protein failed to decrease mRNA but due to affinity for host cell membranes, it might have role in cytotoxicity |
Figure 1Immune evasion of Contact between Eh and host cell is mediated by the Gal-lectin and host cell surface Gal and GalNAc receptors. Other amebic proteins involved in host cell attachment include the trans-membrane serine, threonine, and isoleucine proteins (STIRP) and transmembrane kinase family member TMKb1-9. After Eh-host contact, three events can take place-(B) amebic trogocytosis (C) apoptotic cell death (D) phagocytosis. In (B) larger cells undergo amebic trogocytosis. Amebic trogocytosis require PI3K and C2PK signal transduction for actin polymerization. (C) Host cells that have been induced to undergo apoptosis express phosphatidylserine (PS) and C1q complement protein that induce opsonization by ameba involving amebic calreticulin receptor. Finally, in (D) both apoptotically death cell and smaller cell undergo phagocytosis. Signal transduction for phagocytosis is also mediated by PI3K and EhC2PK and influences actin polymerization. PI3K-phosphoinositide 3 kinase, C2PK-C2 domain containing protein kinase, TMK39-Transmembrane kinase family member.