Eukaryotic Cell
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EC Accepts, published online ahead of print on 25 July 2008
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Eukaryotic Cell doi:10.1128/EC.00123-08
Copyright (c) 2008, American Society for Microbiology and/or the Listed Authors/Institutions. All Rights Reserved.

Characterization of an Entamoeba histolytica High-Mobility-Group Box Protein Induced during Intestinal Infection

Mayuresh M. Abhyankar, Amelia E. Hochreiter, Jessica Hershey, Clive Evans, Yan Zhang, Oswald Crasta, Bruno W. S. Sobral, Barbara J. Mann, William A. Petri Jr.*, and Carol A. Gilchrist

Departments of Medicine, Microbiology, and Pathology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA USA; Virginia Bioinformatics Insititute, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: wap3g{at}virginia.edu.


   Abstract

The unicellular eukaryote Entamoeba histolytica is a human parasite that causes amebic dysentery and liver abscess. A genome-wide analysis of gene expression modulated by intestinal colonization and invasion identified an up-regulated transcript that encoded a putative high-mobility-group box (HMGB) protein, EhHMGB1. We tested if EhHMGB1 encoded a functional HMGB protein, and determined its role in control of parasite gene expression. Recombinant EhHMGB1 was able to bend DNA in vitro, a characteristic of HMGB proteins. Core conserved residues required for DNA bending activity in other HMGB proteins were demonstrated by mutational analysis to be essential for EhHMGB1 activity. EhHMGB1 was also able to enhance the binding of human p53 to its cognate DNA sequence in vitro, which is expected for an HMGB1 protein. Confocal microscopy, using antibodies against the recombinant protein, confirmed its nuclear localization. Overexpression of EhHMGB1 in HM1: IMSS trophozoites led to modulation of 33 transcripts involved in a variety of cellular functions. Of these, twenty were also modulated at either day one or day 29 in the mouse model of intestinal amebiasis. Notably, four transcripts with known roles in virulence, including two encoding Gal/GalNAc lectin light chains, were modulated in response to EhHMGB1 overexpression. We concluded that EhHMGB1 was a bona fide HMGB protein with the capacity to recapitulate part of the modulation of parasite gene expression seen during adaptation to the host intestine.







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