I find it facinating that humans can suffer from an amoeba infestation. Amoeba m
ID: 32418 • Letter: I
Question
I find it facinating that humans can suffer from an amoeba infestation. Amoeba must reproduce far more slowly than bacteria. In size, they seem to be approximately the same size as the various leukocyte cell types (I see estimates ranging from 10?m to 30?m in diameter). I would assume that they are slow-moving, or, at least no more motile than a leukocyte.
How is it, then, that a population of amoeba can take up residence (and a particularly dangerous one, at that) in a human body without them being wiped out by the immune system? Do we know much about the pathology of such an infection? Do the amoeba actually consume the leukocytes by phagocytosis before they can be consumed themselves?
Explanation / Answer
Assuming you don't mean a single leukocyte as I doubt That a lone leukocyte could do much. Macrophages and neutrophils can release their lytic/degrading enzymes spewing them on to the amoeba. Antibodies produced by BCells, particularly the IgE type can coat amoeba and cause histamine release from mast cells recruiting more neutrophils and macrophages. Eosinophils are also important. Finally one must not forget the complement system, a series of proteins that could kill by making pores in the amoeba membrane. Amoeba have however developed many techniques for immune evasion, such as diverting the immune system via cell signalling (cytokines) such as IL10 which dampens the immune system or coating themselves or activating the "wrong" immune system.
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