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Infect. Immun., Mar 1995, 917-925, Vol 63, No. 3
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology

Molecular cloning of a 30-kilodalton lysine-rich surface antigen from a nonpathogenic Entamoeba histolytica strain and its expression in a pathogenic strain

R Bracha, Y Nuchamowitz and D Mirelman
Department of Membrane Research and Biophysics, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel.

A monoclonal antibody (MAb), 318-28, that specifically reacts with a 30- kDa antigen present on membrane surfaces of all nonpathogenic (NP) Entamoeba histolytica strains tested and which did not react with pathogenic (P) strains was used for the isolation of the cDNA coding for this antigen from an expression library of an NP E. histolytica strain. The deduced amino acid composition was rich in lysine residues (14.5%), with some sequence similarity to a polyadenylate-binding protein. Southern and Northern (RNA) blot analyses, as well as amplifications of DNA segments by PCR, indicate that a very similar gene (identity of 96.5%) exists in P strains of E. histolytica. Unexpectedly, the NP-specific antigen was also identified by MAb 318-28 on the surfaces of a cloned, xenically cultivated and well- characterized P strain (BNI:0591) that was recently isolated from a human liver abscess. Binding of the MAb, both to the cell surfaces and to Western blots (immunoblots), was abolished, however, upon axenization of the BNI:0591 cultures. Oligonucleotide primers, designed to anneal only to specific DNA sequences of the NP 30-kDa protein gene copy, amplified a DNA segment from P strain BNI:0591 which was identical in sequence to that of the NP 30-kDa protein gene. Our findings indicate that a P strain of E. histolytica can possess and express, under certain growth conditions, an antigen that is usually detected only in NP strains.


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