Title: Entamoeba histolytica
1Entamoeba histolytica
- cosmopolitan distribution
- no animal reservoirs
- facultative pathogen
- most clear the infection spontaneous in 6-12
months with mild or no symptoms - can cause a serious invasive disease
- worldwide incidence 0.2-50
- estimated that 10 of worlds population may be
infected - 50 million cases invasive amebiasis/yr
- 100,000 deaths/yr
2Facultative Pathogenicity of Entamoeba histolytica
- 1875 Lösch correlated dysentery with amebic
trophozoites - 1925 Brumpt proposed two species E. dysenteriae
and E. dispar - 1970's biochemical differences noted between
invasive and non-invasive isolates - 80's/90's several antigenic and DNA differences
demonstrated - rRNA 2.2 sequence difference
- 1993 Diamond and Clark proposed a new species
(E. dispar) to describe non-invasive strains - 1997 WHO accepted two species
3Entamoeba histolytica Life Cycle
4Excystation
- cyst wall disruption
- ameba emerges
- nuclear division (4?8)
- cytoplasmic division (8 amebala)
- trophozoites colonize large intestine
- feed on bacteria and debris
- replicate by binary fission
5Excystation
- cyst wall disruption
- ameba emerges
- nuclear division (4?8)
- cytoplasmic division (8 amebala)
- trophozoites colonize large intestine
- feed on bacteria and debris
- replicate by binary fission
6Encystation
- trophozoite rounds up
- secretion of cyst wall
- aggregation of ribosomes ( chromatoid bodies)
- 2 rounds of nuclear division (1?4 nuclei)
- survive weeks to months
7immature cyst
mature cyst
trophozoite
8Pathogenesis of Amebiasis
- NON-INVASIVE
- ameba colony on intestinal mucosa
- asymptomatic cyst passer
- non-dysenteric diarrhea, abdominal cramps, other
GI symptoms - INVASIVE
- necrosis of mucosa ? ulcers, dysentery
- ulcer enlargement ? dysentery, peritonitis
- metastasis ? extraintestinal amebiasis
9- ulcers with raised borders
- little inflammation between lesions
10- flasked-shaped ulcer
- trophozoites at boundary of necrotic and healthy
tissue - trophozoites ingesting host cells
- dysentery (blood and mucus in feces)
11hematophagous trophozoites
12Lateral and Downward Expansion of Ameba into
Lamina Propria
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15Disease Manifestations
- ulcer enlargement ? severe dysentery
- perforation of intestinal wall ? peritonitis
- local abscesses
- 2o bacterial infections
- occasional ameboma (amebic granuloma)
- cessation of cyst production
ameboma inflammatory thickening of intestinal
wall around the abscess (can be confused with
tumor)
16- Extraintestinal Amebiasis
- metastasis via blood stream
- primarily liver (portal vein)
- other sites less frequent
- ameba-free stools common
- high antibody titers
- Amebic Liver Abscess
- chocolate-colored pus
- necrotic material
- usually bacteria free
- lesions expand and coalesce
- further metastasis, direct extension or fistula
17- Pulmonary Amebiasis
- rarely primary
- rupture of liver abscess through diaphragm
- 2o bacterial infections common
- fever, cough, dyspnea, pain, vomica
18- Cutaneous Amebiasis
- intestinal or hepatic fistula
- mucosa bathed in fluids containing trophozoites
- perianal ulcers
- urogenital (eg, labia, vagina, penis)
19- Cutaneous Amebiasis
- intestinal or hepatic fistula
- mucosa bathed in fluids containing trophozoites
- perianal ulcers
- urogenital (eg, labia, vagina, penis)
20- Cutaneous Amebiasis
- intestinal or hepatic fistula
- mucosa bathed in fluids containing trophozoites
- perianal ulcers
- urogenital (eg, labia, vagina, penis)
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22Facultative Pathogenicity
- 85-90 of infected individuals are asymptomatic
- 10 of the symptomatic will develop severe
invasive disease
23Molecular Epidemiology
- molecular probes used to survey for E. dispar
and E. histolytica - E. dispar 10-fold gt E. histolytica
- discrete endemic pockets of E. histolytica
- many asymptomatic E.h. infections
- 10 of the E.h. infections are associated with
invasive amebiasis - 25 seropositive for E. histolytica in endemic
areas
24pathogenecity ability to cause disease (genetic component)
virulence relative capacity to cause disease (degree of pathology)
- a pathogen has an inherent ability to break host
cell barriers - virulence usually correlates with ability to
replicate within host - various degrees of virulence may be exhibited
depending on conditions
25- contact-dependent killing of epithelial cells
- breakdown of tissues (extracellular matrix)
- secreted proteases?
- contact-dependent killing of neutrophils,
leukocytes, etc.
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27Galactose Inhibitable Adherence Protein
- trophozoites adhere to mucins, epithelial cells,
leukocytes, etc - mediated by galactose-inhibitable lectin activity
- lectin activity due to surface protein (GIAP)
- 170 kDa heavy chain mediates binding (multigene
family) - 35 kDa light chain anchor to membrane
- a-GIAP Abs abrogate complement resistance
- 85 identity between Eh and Ed
- Are there differences in adherence?
- after contact the target cell is lysed and
phagocytosed by the trophozoite
28Host Cell Lysis and Phagocytosis
- Amebapore
- pore-forming peptide
- potent anti-bacterial activity
- located in vacuoles, not secreted
- Eh and Ed sequences are 95 identical
- Glu?Pro change breaks a-helix
- Ed had 80 less activity than Eh
29Entamoeba Proteases
- Eh expresses and secretes higher levels of
cysteine proteases - 6 cys-protease genes (ehcp1-6)
- ehcp1 and 5 are missing in Ed
- 90 inhibition of ehcp5 did not affect
trophozoite mediated destruction of host cell
monolayers
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32- Intestinal Symptoms
- range
- mild to intense
- transient to long lasting
- nondysenteric
- diarrhea
- cramps
- flatulence
- nausea
- dysenteric
- blood/mucus in stools
- cramps/pain
- tenesmus
- ameboma
- palpable mass
- obstruction
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34Antigen Detection Assay
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36Control and Epidemiology
Treatment
- asymptomatic
- iodoquinol or paromomycin
- endemic areas?
- symptomatic
- metronidazole or tinidazole
- followed by lumenal agents
- drain liver abscess
- only with high probability of rupture!
- avoid fecal-oral transmission
- not normally associated with travelers diarrhea
- gt 1 month stay
- institutions
- mass drug treatment little affect
- ? staff and improved housing conditions lowers
prevalence - male homosexuals
- 40-50 in NYC and SF during late 70s
- lower since AIDS/safe sex