Young (less than 8 weeks old) immunocompetent BALB/c mice became infected with Blastocystis hominis after inoculation of fecal cysts orally and of in vitro axenic-culture forms intracecally. This study confirmed that the fecal cyst was the form responsible for external transmission and that the mode of transmission was by the fecal-oral route. The infection was self-limiting and the infected BALB/c mice appeared normal except that some of them showed weight loss and lethargy. Both vacuolar and granular forms were found in the cecum, but only cyst forms were observed in the colon. Histological examination of the cecum and colon showed intense inflammatory-cell infiltration, edematous lamina propria, and mucosal sloughing. It is apparent that although B. hominis is not invasive, it is capable of causing pathogenesis in BALB/c mice.
This report describes the ultrastructure and viability of cysts of Blastocystis hominis from feces of infected patients. The cysts were round to ovoid, measured 2-5 microns in size, and contained a condensed cytoplasm that had vacuoles of varying sizes, four nuclei, and as many as six cristate mitochondria. The cell wall was rather electron-lucent. Surprisingly, chromatoid-like structures were found in the cytoplasm and nucleus of some of the cysts. These have not previously been reported in Blastocystis. The cysts can survive in water for up to 19 days at normal temperatures but are fragile at extreme temperatures and in common disinfectants.
Two isolates (WR1 and WR2) of Blastocystis from laboratory-bred Wistar rats were axenized by a method of colony growth in soft agar combined with antibiotic treatment. The colonies were cultured in Iscove's modified Dulbecco's medium (IMDM) and Bacto agar mixture supplemented with 10% horse serum in the presence of thioglycollate. The cells from the colonies had an ameboid outline with a central body. Large inclusions were seen in the central body of some cells. Some granular forms were also found. In the axenic culture of isolate WR2, about one-third of the organisms were granular forms. Cysts were found in the axenic culture of both isolates. This is the first report of such cyst formation in in vitro culture. The karyotypic patterns of both isolates of the rat Blastocystis were analyzed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). A total of 13 chromosomal bands were separated, ranging from 1.86 Mb to 295 kb. The karyotypic patterns of the rat Blastocystis were different from those of B. hominis and reptilian Blastocystis. On the basis of the above-mentioned differences, the rat Blastocystis is assigned as B. ratti sp. nov.
The development of cysts of Blastocystis hominis isolated from human feces by the Ficoll-Paque concentration method and cultured in Jones' medium containing 10% horse serum is described. The morphological changes were studied by light and transmission electron microscopy at different intervals for up to 48 h. The cysts developed into a large number of vacuolar forms within 24 h, and binary fission was the only mode of reproduction observed.
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