TY - JOUR
T1 - Entamoeba moshkovskii is associated with diarrhea in infants and causes diarrhea and colitis in mice
AU - Shimokawa, Chikako
AU - Kabir, Mamun
AU - Taniuchi, Mami
AU - Mondal, Dinesh
AU - Kobayashi, Seiki
AU - Ali, Ibne Karim M.
AU - Sobuz, Shihab U.
AU - Senba, Masachika
AU - Houpt, Eric
AU - Haque, Rashidul
AU - Petri, William A.
AU - Hamano, Shinjiro
N1 - Funding Information:
Financial support. This work was supported by NIH grant 5RO1 AI043596 (to W. A. P.), a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas from MEXT (21022037 to S. H.), Grants-in-Aid for International Scientific Research (B) from JSPS (20406008, 23406009 to S. H.), a Health Labour Sciences Research Grant (H20-Shinkoh-Ippan-016, H23-Shinkoh-Ippan-014 to S. H.), the Takeda Foundation, the Uehara Foundation (to S. H.), and the Global COE Program, Nagasaki University, supported by MEXT (to S. H.).
PY - 2012/9/1
Y1 - 2012/9/1
N2 - Background.Entamoeba moshkovskii is prevalent in developing countries and morphologically indistinguishable from pathogenic Entamoeba histolytica and nonpathogenic Entamoeba dispar. It is not known if E. moshkovskii is pathogenic.Methods.Mice were intracecally challenged with the trophozoites of each Entamoeba spp. to test the ability to cause diarrhea, and infants in Bangladesh were prospectively observed to see if newly acquired E. moshkovskii infection was associated with diarrhea.Results.E. moshkovskii and E. histolytica caused diarrhea and weight loss in susceptible mice. E. dispar infected none of the mouse strains tested. In Mirpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh, E. moshkovskii, E. histolytica, and E. dispar were identified in 42 (2.95), 66 (4.63), and 5 (0.35), respectively, of 1426 diarrheal episodes in 385 children followed prospectively from birth to one year of age. Diarrhea occurred temporally with acquisition of a new E. moshkovskii infection: in the 2 months preceding E. moshkvskii-associated diarrhea, 86 (36 of 42) of monthly surveillance stool samples were negative for E. moshkovskii.Conclusions.E. moshkovskii was found to be pathogenic in mice. In children, the acquisition of E. moshkovskii infection was associated with diarrhea. These data are consistent with E. moshkovskii causing disease, indicating that it is important to reexamine its pathogenicity.
AB - Background.Entamoeba moshkovskii is prevalent in developing countries and morphologically indistinguishable from pathogenic Entamoeba histolytica and nonpathogenic Entamoeba dispar. It is not known if E. moshkovskii is pathogenic.Methods.Mice were intracecally challenged with the trophozoites of each Entamoeba spp. to test the ability to cause diarrhea, and infants in Bangladesh were prospectively observed to see if newly acquired E. moshkovskii infection was associated with diarrhea.Results.E. moshkovskii and E. histolytica caused diarrhea and weight loss in susceptible mice. E. dispar infected none of the mouse strains tested. In Mirpur, Dhaka, Bangladesh, E. moshkovskii, E. histolytica, and E. dispar were identified in 42 (2.95), 66 (4.63), and 5 (0.35), respectively, of 1426 diarrheal episodes in 385 children followed prospectively from birth to one year of age. Diarrhea occurred temporally with acquisition of a new E. moshkovskii infection: in the 2 months preceding E. moshkvskii-associated diarrhea, 86 (36 of 42) of monthly surveillance stool samples were negative for E. moshkovskii.Conclusions.E. moshkovskii was found to be pathogenic in mice. In children, the acquisition of E. moshkovskii infection was associated with diarrhea. These data are consistent with E. moshkovskii causing disease, indicating that it is important to reexamine its pathogenicity.
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U2 - 10.1093/infdis/jis414
DO - 10.1093/infdis/jis414
M3 - Article
C2 - 22723640
AN - SCOPUS:84863654500
VL - 206
SP - 744
EP - 751
JO - Journal of Infectious Diseases
JF - Journal of Infectious Diseases
SN - 0022-1899
IS - 5
ER -