Affiliation:
1. VTT Biotechnology, FIN 02044-VTT, Espoo, Finland
2. Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control
3. Microbiology and Tumorbiology Centre, Karolinska Institute, S 171 82, Solna, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Some unicellular organisms are able to encyst as a protective response to a harmful environment. The cyst wall usually contains chitin as its main structural constituent, but in some cases, as in
Acanthamoeba
, it consists of cellulose instead. Specific cytochemical differentiation between cellulose and chitin by microscopy has not been possible, due to the similarity of their constituent β-1,4-linked hexose backbones. Thus, various fluorescent brightening agents and lectins bind to both cellulose and chitin. We have used a recombinant cellulose-binding protein consisting of two cellulose-binding domains (CBDs) from
Trichoderma reesei
cellulases linked together in combination with monoclonal anticellulase antibodies and anti-mouse immunoglobulin fluorescein conjugate to specifically stain cellulose in the cysts of
Acanthamoeba
strains for fluorescence microscopy imaging. Staining was observed in ruptured cysts and frozen sections of cysts but not in intact mature cysts. No staining reaction was observed with the chitin-containing cyst walls of
Giardia intestinalis
,
Entamoeba dispar
, or
Pneumocystis carinii
. Thus, the recombinant CBD can be used as a marker to distinguish between cellulose and chitin. Thirteen of 25 environmental or clinical isolates of amoebae reacted in the CBD binding assay. All 13 isolates were identified as
Acanthamoeba
spp. Five isolates of
Hartmannella
and seven isolates of
Naegleria
tested negative in the CBD binding assay. Whether cyst wall cellulose really is a unique property of
Acanthamoeba
spp. among free-living amoebae, as suggested by our findings, remains to be shown in more extensive studies.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
32 articles.
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