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Germination and Amplification of Anthrax Spores by Soil-Dwelling Amoebas

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TLDR
Under simulated environmental conditions, it is shown that B. anthracis germinates and multiplies within Acanthamoeba castellanii, supporting the hypothesis that amoebas contribute to the persistence and amplification of B. anthology in natural environments.
Abstract
While anthrax is typically associated with bioterrorism, in many parts of the world the anthrax bacillus (Bacillus anthracis) is endemic in soils, where it causes sporadic disease in livestock. These soils are typically rich in organic matter and calcium that promote survival of resilient B. anthracis spores. Outbreaks of anthrax tend to occur in warm weather following rains that are believed to concentrate spores in low-lying areas where runoff collects. It has been concluded that elevated spore concentrations are not the result of vegetative growth as B. anthracis competes poorly against indigenous bacteria. Here, we test an alternative hypothesis in which amoebas, common in moist soils and pools of standing water, serve as amplifiers of B. anthracis spores by enabling germination and intracellular multiplication. Under simulated environmental conditions, we show that B. anthracis germinates and multiplies within Acanthamoeba castellanii. The growth kinetics of a fully virulent B. anthracis Ames strain (containing both the pX01 and pX02 virulence plasmids) and vaccine strain Sterne (containing only pX01) inoculated as spores in coculture with A. castellanii showed a nearly 50-fold increase in spore numbers after 72 h. In contrast, the plasmidless strain 9131 showed little growth, demonstrating that plasmid pX01 is essential for growth within A. castellanii. Electron and time-lapse fluorescence microscopy revealed that spores germinate within amoebal phagosomes, vegetative bacilli undergo multiplication, and, following demise of the amoebas, bacilli sporulate in the extracellular milieu. This analysis supports our hypothesis that amoebas contribute to the persistence and amplification of B. anthracis in natural environments.

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The Bacillus cereus Group: Bacillus Species with Pathogenic Potential

TL;DR: This article compares and contrast B. anthracis, B. cereus, and B. thuringiensis, including ecology, cell structure and development, virulence attributes, gene regulation and genetic exchange systems, and experimental models of disease.
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Antibacterial Photosensitization-Based Treatment for Food Safety

TL;DR: Development of novel methods for decontamination of food and food-processing, food-handling environment, which are compatible with the consumer demand for minimally processed safe foods, remains one of the urgent topics of food science.
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Free-Living Amoebae as Hosts for and Vectors of Intracellular Microorganisms with Public Health Significance

TL;DR: Future research is expected to reveal further endocytobionts within free-living amoebae and other protozoa through co-cultivation studies, genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic analyses.
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Fatal attraction: vegetation responses to nutrient inputs attract herbivores to infectious anthrax carcass sites.

TL;DR: It is found that carcass-mediated nutrient pulses improved soil and vegetation, and that BA is found on grasses up to 2 years after death, suggesting that hosts are limited in their ability to trade off nutrient intake with parasite avoidance when relying on indirect cues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relevance of free-living amoebae as hosts for phylogenetically diverse microorganisms

TL;DR: The amoebic passage seems to be a prerequisite for the development of virulence factors and it may have an impact on evolutionary processes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Legionella and Legionnaires' Disease: 25 Years of Investigation

TL;DR: There is optimism that newly developed guidelines and water treatment practices can greatly reduce the incidence of this preventable illness, and there is a critical need for surveillance for travel-related legionellosis in the United States.
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Health Impacts of Environmental Mycobacteria

TL;DR: Environmental mycobacteria are emerging pathogens causing opportunistic infections in humans and animals, and may also play a role in chronic bowl diseases, allergies, immunity to other pulmonary infections, and the efficacy of bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccination.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology of Free-Living Amoebae

TL;DR: Small free-living amoebae (FLA) are the main predators controlling bacterial populations in soils; however, they may spread deeper, reaching the vadose zone of groundwater systems, especially where bacterial populations get to high densities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Germination of Bacillus anthracis spores within alveolar macrophages

TL;DR: It is shown using immunofluorescent staining, confocal scanning laser microscopy and image cytometry analysis that the alveolar macrophage was the primary site of B. anthracis germination in a murine inhalation infection model and that the toxin genes and their trans‐activator, AtxA, were expressed within the macrophages after germination.