Isolation of Acanthamoeba T5 from Water: Characterization of Its Pathogenic Potential, Including the Production of Extracellular Vesicles
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Retana Moreira, Lissette; Linares Ordóñez, Fátima; Prescilla Ledezma, Alexa; Osuna Ortega, AntonioEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Pathogenic potential Cytopathic effect Extracellular vesicles Atomic force microscopy
Date
2020-02-21Referencia bibliográfica
Retana Moreira, L., Vargas Ramírez, D., Linares, F., Prescilla Ledezma, A., Vaglio Garro, A., Osuna, A., ... & Abrahams Sandí, E. (2020). Isolation of Acanthamoeba T5 from Water: Characterization of Its Pathogenic Potential, Including the Production of Extracellular Vesicles. Pathogens, 9(2), 144.
Résumé
Acanthamoeba is a genus of free-living amoebae widely distributed in nature, associated
with the development of encephalitis and keratitis. Despite the fact that it is common to find genotype
T5 in environmental samples, only a few cases have been associated with clinical cases in humans.
The wide distribution of Acanthamoeba, the characteristic of being amphizoic and the severity of the
disease motivate researchers to focus on the isolation of these organisms, but also in demonstrating
direct and indirect factors that could indicate a possible pathogenic potential. Here, we performed the
characterization of the pathogenic potential of an Acanthamoeba T5 isolate collected from a water source
in a hospital. Osmo- and thermotolerance, the secretion of proteases and the effect of trophozoites over
cell monolayers were analyzed by different methodologies. Additionally, we confirm the secretion of
extracellular vesicles (EVs) of this isolate incubated at two different temperatures, and the presence of
serine and cysteine proteases in these vesicles. Finally, using atomic force microscopy, we determined
some nanomechanical properties of the secreted vesicles and found a higher value of adhesion in
the EVs obtained at 37 ºC, which could have implications in the parasite´s survival and damaging
potential in two different biological environments.