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Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability

Entamoeba histolytica, a protozoan parasite, causes amoebiasis, which is a global public health problem. The major route of infection is oral ingestion of cysts, the only form that is able to transmit to a new host. Cysts are produced by cell differentiation from proliferative trophozoites in a proc...

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Autores principales: Mi-ichi, Fumika, Tsugawa, Hiroshi, Arita, Makoto, Yoshida, Hiroki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9429911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35943216
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00299-22
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author Mi-ichi, Fumika
Tsugawa, Hiroshi
Arita, Makoto
Yoshida, Hiroki
author_facet Mi-ichi, Fumika
Tsugawa, Hiroshi
Arita, Makoto
Yoshida, Hiroki
author_sort Mi-ichi, Fumika
collection PubMed
description Entamoeba histolytica, a protozoan parasite, causes amoebiasis, which is a global public health problem. The major route of infection is oral ingestion of cysts, the only form that is able to transmit to a new host. Cysts are produced by cell differentiation from proliferative trophozoites in a process termed “encystation.” During encystation, cell morphology is markedly changed; motile amoeboid cells become rounded, nonmotile cells. Concomitantly, cell components change and significant fluctuations of metabolites occur. Cholesteryl sulfate (CS) is a crucial metabolite for encystation. However, its precise role remains uncertain. To address this issue, we used in vitro culture of Entamoeba invadens as the model system for the E. histolytica encystation study and identified serum-free culture conditions with CS supplementation at concentrations similar to intracellular CS concentrations during natural encystation. Using this culture system, we show that CS exerts pleiotropic effects during Entamoeba encystation, affecting cell rounding and development of membrane impermeability. CS dose dependently induced and maintained encysting cells as spherical maturing cysts with almost no phagocytosis activity. Consequently, the percentage of mature cysts was increased. CS treatment also caused time- and dose-dependent development of membrane impermeability in encysting cells via induction of de novo synthesis of dihydroceramides containing very long N-acyl chains (≥26 carbons). These results indicate that CS-mediated morphological and physiological changes are necessary for the formation of mature cysts and the maintenance of the Entamoeba life cycle. Our findings also reveal important morphological aspects of the process of dormancy and the control of membrane structure. IMPORTANCE Entamoeba histolytica causes a parasitic infectious disease, amoebiasis. Amoebiasis is a global public health problem with a high occurrence of infection and inadequate clinical options. The parasite alternates its form between a proliferative trophozoite and a dormant cyst that enables the parasite to adapt to new environments. The transition stage in which trophozoites differentiate into cysts is termed “encystation.” Cholesteryl sulfate is essential for encystation; however, its precise role remains to be determined. Here, we show that cholesteryl sulfate is a multifunctional metabolite exerting pleiotropic roles during Entamoeba encystation, including the rounding of cells and the development of membrane impermeability. Such morphological and physiological changes are required for Entamoeba to produce cysts that are transmissible to a new host, which is essential for maintenance of the Entamoeba life cycle. Our findings are therefore relevant not only to Entamoeba biology but also to general cell and lipid biology.
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spelling pubmed-94299112022-09-01 Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability Mi-ichi, Fumika Tsugawa, Hiroshi Arita, Makoto Yoshida, Hiroki mSphere Research Article Entamoeba histolytica, a protozoan parasite, causes amoebiasis, which is a global public health problem. The major route of infection is oral ingestion of cysts, the only form that is able to transmit to a new host. Cysts are produced by cell differentiation from proliferative trophozoites in a process termed “encystation.” During encystation, cell morphology is markedly changed; motile amoeboid cells become rounded, nonmotile cells. Concomitantly, cell components change and significant fluctuations of metabolites occur. Cholesteryl sulfate (CS) is a crucial metabolite for encystation. However, its precise role remains uncertain. To address this issue, we used in vitro culture of Entamoeba invadens as the model system for the E. histolytica encystation study and identified serum-free culture conditions with CS supplementation at concentrations similar to intracellular CS concentrations during natural encystation. Using this culture system, we show that CS exerts pleiotropic effects during Entamoeba encystation, affecting cell rounding and development of membrane impermeability. CS dose dependently induced and maintained encysting cells as spherical maturing cysts with almost no phagocytosis activity. Consequently, the percentage of mature cysts was increased. CS treatment also caused time- and dose-dependent development of membrane impermeability in encysting cells via induction of de novo synthesis of dihydroceramides containing very long N-acyl chains (≥26 carbons). These results indicate that CS-mediated morphological and physiological changes are necessary for the formation of mature cysts and the maintenance of the Entamoeba life cycle. Our findings also reveal important morphological aspects of the process of dormancy and the control of membrane structure. IMPORTANCE Entamoeba histolytica causes a parasitic infectious disease, amoebiasis. Amoebiasis is a global public health problem with a high occurrence of infection and inadequate clinical options. The parasite alternates its form between a proliferative trophozoite and a dormant cyst that enables the parasite to adapt to new environments. The transition stage in which trophozoites differentiate into cysts is termed “encystation.” Cholesteryl sulfate is essential for encystation; however, its precise role remains to be determined. Here, we show that cholesteryl sulfate is a multifunctional metabolite exerting pleiotropic roles during Entamoeba encystation, including the rounding of cells and the development of membrane impermeability. Such morphological and physiological changes are required for Entamoeba to produce cysts that are transmissible to a new host, which is essential for maintenance of the Entamoeba life cycle. Our findings are therefore relevant not only to Entamoeba biology but also to general cell and lipid biology. American Society for Microbiology 2022-08-09 /pmc/articles/PMC9429911/ /pubmed/35943216 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00299-22 Text en Copyright © 2022 Mi-ichi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Mi-ichi, Fumika
Tsugawa, Hiroshi
Arita, Makoto
Yoshida, Hiroki
Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability
title Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability
title_full Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability
title_fullStr Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability
title_full_unstemmed Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability
title_short Pleiotropic Roles of Cholesteryl Sulfate during Entamoeba Encystation: Involvement in Cell Rounding and Development of Membrane Impermeability
title_sort pleiotropic roles of cholesteryl sulfate during entamoeba encystation: involvement in cell rounding and development of membrane impermeability
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9429911/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35943216
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00299-22
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