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1 uding the largest known viruses, multiply in amoebae.
2 r producing resistance to grazing by certain amoebae.
3 ect in macrophages but was without effect in amoebae.
4 pression in phagocytic than in nonphagocytic amoebae.
5 multicellular stage and in spores but not in amoebae.
6 ed virions accumulated within the nucleus of amoebae.
7 d O-antigen expression and susceptibility to amoebae.
8  the SibA adhesion molecule in Dictyostelium amoebae.
9 tion of single regions reduced growth within amoebae.
10 AE is the formation of granulomas around the amoebae.
11 required for maximal intracellular growth in amoebae.
12 ts exhibited intracellular multiplication in amoebae.
13 ater bacterium and intracellular parasite of amoebae.
14 ted and unphosphorylated actin colocalize in amoebae.
15 stained the plasma membrane of D. discoideum amoebae.
16 le intracellular pathogen of macrophages and amoebae.
17 o potential pathogens, including free-living amoebae.
18 rs that either induce encystment or kill the amoebae.
19 F. tularensis is also able to survive within amoebae.
20 H. capsulatum conidia were also cytotoxic to amoebae.
21 r chromosomes before mitosis of the emergent amoebae.
22 pneumophila evolved as a parasite of aquatic amoebae.
23 acrophages and Hartmannella and Acanthamoeba amoebae.
24 hamoeba castellanii, which leads to death of amoebae.
25 ion protected these cells against killing by amoebae.
26 onella pneumophila to grow in coculture with amoebae.
27 an virulence also promote fungal survival in amoebae.
28 permissively gated, mixed GFP(+) and GFP(-)) amoebae.
29 ms the developmental totipotency of prespore amoebae.
30 er numbers in its intravacuolar niche within amoebae.
31 chloroplasts of algae and in mitochondria of amoebae.
32 asses), which did not cross-react with other amoebae.
33 ntracellularly in both human macrophages and amoebae.
34 terpretation that VSM are arcellinid testate amoebae.
35 to cell growth to ensure survival of emerged amoebae.
36  end-mediated DNA insertion in Dictyostelium amoebae.
37  juxtaposed to the bacterial surfaces within amoebae.
38 t aquaporin allowed rapid water entry in the amoebae.
39 phoglycosylated protein in bacterially grown amoebae.
40 culum of L. pneumophila cells and uninfected amoebae.
41 east, and developmental morphology of social amoebae.
42 fector repertoire tailoring within different amoebae.
43 nts of GFP-expressing bacteria in individual amoebae.
44 [Rozellomycota], an intranuclear parasite of amoebae.
45 /manganese uptake, and bacterial survival in amoebae.
46 ents by growing in a wide variety of aquatic amoebae.
47 ivity is critical for promoting infection of amoebae.
48 acuolar proliferation within macrophages and amoebae.
49 macrophages is conserved during infection of amoebae.
50 ens that share the same ecological niches as amoebae.
51 cterium marinum strains which failed to lyse amoebae.
52 es, cellulose delta(13)C, and fossil testate amoebae.
53                              Of the isolated amoebae, 31 were Acanthamoeba spp., 21 were Hartmannella
54 of host cells, including macrophages and the amoebae Acanthamoeba castellanii and Hartmannella vermif
55                                     The soil amoebae Acanthamoeba causes Acanthamoeba keratitis, a se
56             Infection in murine macrophages, amoebae (Acanthamoeba castellanii), nematodes (Caenorhab
57 he mce cluster resulted in virulence towards amoebae (Acanthamoeba polyphaga) and reduced colonizatio
58                                         When amoebae aggregate they do not perfectly discriminate aga
59              Nutrient-deprived Dictyostelium amoebae aggregate to form a multicellular structure by c
60  achieve the multicellular stage, individual amoebae aggregate upon starvation to form a fruiting bod
61 llular stage in which not necessarily clonal amoebae aggregate upon starvation to form a possibly chi
62 g mainly in macrophages, with replication in amoebae also having been reported.
63 tants, blocked for growth in macrophages and amoebae, also did not grow in D. discoideum.
64 ities, including a high abundance of testate amoebae and a high diversity of endemic OTUs within the
65                                              Amoebae and bacteria interact within predator-prey and h
66  Legionella pneumophila colonizes freshwater amoebae and can also replicate within alveolar macrophag
67 al selection in environmental hosts, such as amoebae and free-living nematodes.
68 s of infectious agents, including pathogenic amoebae and fungi.
69 equired for L. pneumophila infection of both amoebae and human macrophages.
70  in the cytoplasm of nonmotile Dictyostelium amoebae and human neutrophils, concentrates with F-actin
71 ithin iron-depleted Hartmannella vermiformis amoebae and human U937 cell macrophages.
72 nella pneumophila is a bacterial pathogen of amoebae and humans.
73 lular proliferation, but is limiting in both amoebae and humans.
74    Virulent P. aeruginosa strains kill these amoebae and leave an intact bacterial lawn.
75 nst severin isolated from both Dictyostelium amoebae and Lewis lung carcinoma cells.
76 n the laboratory in a variety of fresh-water amoebae and macrophage-like cell lines.
77     Legionella pneumophila replicates within amoebae and macrophages and causes the severe pneumonia
78 lla genomes, in entry of L. pneumophila into amoebae and macrophages and in host-specific intracellul
79  intracellular bacterium that resides within amoebae and macrophages in a specialized compartment ter
80            Entry of the deletion mutant into amoebae and macrophages was decreased by >70%.
81 Histoplasma capsulatum were each ingested by amoebae and macrophages, and phagocytosis of yeast cells
82 tic reduction in intracellular growth within amoebae and macrophages, two phenotypes that are not exh
83    By comparing genes that promote growth in amoebae and macrophages, we show that adaptation of L. p
84 on and a replicative cell type that grows in amoebae and macrophages.
85 cation when stationary-phase bacteria infect amoebae and macrophages.
86  host cells for Legionnaires' disease, i.e., amoebae and macrophages.
87 mechanism within D. discoideum as it does in amoebae and macrophages.
88 hin a Legionella-containing vacuole (LCV) of amoebae and macrophages.
89 ty of V. cholerae cells toward Dictyostelium amoebae and mammalian J774 macrophages by a contact-depe
90                  In Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae and mammalian leukocytes, the receptors and G-pr
91 markably similar in Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae and mammalian leukocytes.
92 tative intracellular pathogen of free-living amoebae and mammalian phagocytes.
93 ers of magnitude in Acanthamoeba castellanii amoebae and nearly 2 orders of magnitude in J774 mouse m
94                               Experiments in amoebae and neutrophils have shown that local accumulati
95                                 We find that amoebae and neutrophils, cells traditionally used to stu
96 tion pathways underlying gradient sensing in amoebae and neutrophils.
97 egionella pneumophila, a parasite of aquatic amoebae and pathogen of pulmonary macrophages, replicate
98 tion against environmental predators such as amoebae and provide an explanation for the broad host ra
99 thods for long-term storage of Dictyostelium amoebae and spores.
100  predators such as free-living nematodes and amoebae and suggest that C. elegans can be used as a sim
101 lity to grow within Hartmannella vermiformis amoebae and the human macrophage-like U937 cells.
102  organisms were prepared by coculture of the amoebae and virulent L. pneumophila cells in vitro.
103 wth of Legionella in both its natural hosts (amoebae) and in mouse macrophages(4,5).
104 ion and characterization of giant viruses of amoebae, and a particular focus on their role in humans
105 Francisella tularensis can persist in water, amoebae, and arthropods, as well as within mammalian mac
106               Motile cells such as bacteria, amoebae, and fibroblasts display a continual level of en
107 in homologous proteins in other green algae, amoebae, and pathogenic fungi.
108 licated as the wild type did in macrophages, amoebae, and the lungs of mice.
109 is apparent innate immune function in social amoebae, and the use of TirA for bacterial feeding, sugg
110 of the transcriptional response of wild-type amoebae, and this allowed their classification into pote
111              When expressed in D. discoideum amoebae, AqpB-GFP fusion constructs localized to vacuola
112          Like dendritic cells, Dictyostelium amoebae are active in macropinocytosis, and various prot
113                             Giant viruses of amoebae are complex microorganisms.
114                          Since environmental amoebae are implicated as reservoirs for an increasing n
115 lts demonstrate that L. pneumophila-infected amoebae are infectious particles in replicative L. pneum
116 r proteins which are important for growth in amoebae are likely secreted by this pathway.
117                   When farmer and non-farmer amoebae are mixed together at various frequencies and al
118                                  Free-living amoebae are protozoa ubiquitously found in water systems
119  at about 2 h, and then rapidly declining as amoebae are released from spores.
120                                      Testate amoebae are representative heterotrophs in peatlands [16
121 strong suspicion that mycobacteria could use amoebae as a vehicle for protection and even replication
122                          These data identify amoebae as potential environmental reservoirs as well as
123 n the surprisingly rapidly changing shape of amoebae as they swim and earlier theoretical schemes for
124 Uniform exposure of Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae as well as mammalian leukocytes to chemoattracta
125  to "climb up." The "apparent weight" of the amoebae at stalling rpm in myosin mutants depended on th
126  showed that, after attaching to host cells, amoebae bite off and ingest distinct host cell fragments
127                             Giant viruses of amoebae bring upheaval to the definition of viruses and
128  exclusively as an intracellular parasite of amoebae, but it also persists in the environment as a fr
129 es naturally in fresh water as a parasite of amoebae, but it can also replicate within alveolar macro
130 in of Cn did not survive when incubated with amoebae, but melanization protected these cells against
131 eruginosa was investigated in 43 isolates of amoebae by multiplex PCR.
132                           I hypothesise that amoebae can escape the ravages of accumulated mutation b
133                         Soil-dwelling social amoebae can help us answer questions about the natural e
134 r in a population of randomly mutated social amoebae can select for cheater-resistance.
135                                      Growing amoebae carrying the construct accumulated the protein p
136                                  Free-living amoebae cause three well-defined disease entities: a rap
137       Gel-shift analysis of undifferentiated amoebae cell extract revealed a protein migrating at 0.4
138 AMP-induced aggregation, although individual amoebae chemotax normally.
139    Upon starvation, individual Dictyostelium amoebae chemotax toward aggregation centers in tightly p
140 e mutant had a decreased replication rate in amoebae compared with isogenic strains.
141 ila-infected H. vermiformis organisms (10(6) amoebae containing 10(5) bacteria), and intrapulmonary g
142                 Our data imply that although amoebae could function as a training ground for intracel
143 impaired 20-fold in Hartmannella vermiformis amoebae cultured in the presence of an iron chelator.
144        Although AH induced encystment of the amoebae, cysts remained viable.
145 la genes required for growth in four diverse amoebae, defining universal virulence factors commonly r
146                                  The emerged amoebae dehydrate due to the high osmolarity within the
147 In contrast, LamA-mediated glycogenolysis in amoebae deprives the natural host from the main building
148     During invasive infection, highly motile amoebae destroy the colonic epithelium, enter the blood
149                          After cell killing, amoebae detach and cease ingestion.
150              Free-living cells of the social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum can aggregate and devel
151                                   The social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum cooperate by forming mu
152 n is the formation of the slug in the social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum.
153 ates mTORC2 in AKT phosphorylation in social amoebae (Dictyostelium discoideum) cells.
154                                       Mutant amoebae display reduced survival during nitrogen starvat
155  shape and movement in starved Dictyostelium amoebae during migration toward a chemoattractant in a m
156  While some amoebae reproduce sexually, many amoebae (e.g., Acanthamoeba, Naegleria) reproduce asexua
157 the bacteria form lawns on these plates with amoebae embedded in them.
158                       Starving Dictyostelium amoebae emit pulses of the chemoattractant cAMP that are
159          We found that growth of M. avium in amoebae enhances both entry and intracellular replicatio
160                The present results show that amoebae exposed to C. xerosis produce increased amounts
161 orescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) upon amoebae expressing a mutated green fluorescent protein g
162                  After aggregation of social amoebae, extracellular cAMP binding to surface receptors
163                                       Social amoebae feed on bacteria in the soil but aggregate when
164                       Wildtype Dictyostelium amoebae feed on bacteria, but for decades laboratory wor
165                                              Amoebae feed on these bacteria and form plaques in their
166 ic cells, including Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae, fibroblasts, and neutrophils, are able to respo
167 ntified putative TPS genes in six species of amoebae, five of which are multicellular social amoebae
168                                  Free-living amoebae (FLA) are ubiquitous protozoa in aquatic/soil ha
169 nd interaction of Legionella and free-living amoebae (FLA) due to biofilm formation, elevated tempera
170                The occurrence of free-living amoebae (FLA) was investigated in 83 water samples from
171             We hypothesized that Free-living amoebae (FLA), as ubiquitous inhabitants of soil and wat
172 AK were sampled and cultured for free-living amoebae (FLA).
173 phic protists, including ciliates, Rhizaria (amoebae, foraminifera, radiolaria) and flagellate taxa.
174 eum there is a stage in which the aggregated amoebae form a migrating slug that moves forward in a po
175                Acanthamoebae are free-living amoebae found in the environment, including soil, freshw
176 lated in endogenous myosin isolated from the amoebae: four serines in the nonhelical tailpiece and Se
177 s phagocytosis, phagocytic and nonphagocytic amoebae from a single culture were purified.
178          All treated and untreated groups of amoebae from the 2 strains exhibited growth (radii of 14
179 ebae, five of which are multicellular social amoebae from the order of Dictyosteliida.
180  for months, through multiple life cycles of amoebae grown on the lawns of other bacteria, thus demon
181 n vitro-grown bacteria, macrophage-grown and amoebae-grown AA200 and AA224 showed an equal and dramat
182  L. pneumophila employs T2S for infection of amoebae, growth within lung cells, dampening of cytokine
183 macrophages and 32% of infected A. polyphaga amoebae harbor cytoplasmic bacteria.
184   In addition, the use of ST4P with cultured amoebae has indicated the potential of oligonucleotide p
185      Therefore, LamA of L. pneumophila is an amoebae host-adapted effector that subverts encystation
186                                        Thus, amoebae-imposed selection is a double-edged sword, havin
187  interact with macrophages, slime molds, and amoebae in a similar manner, suggesting that fungal path
188    These results highlight the importance of amoebae in natural waters as reservoirs of potential pat
189 h the chemotactic aggregation of up to 10(6) amoebae in response to propagating cAMP waves.
190 to the AC of hamster eyes, and the number of amoebae in the AC was determined by histopathology 1 to
191 ween genotypes) for the life cycle of social amoebae in which we theoretically explore multiple non-s
192 uring growth within Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae, indicating that the requirement for SdhA shows
193 r T3SS-dependent cytotoxicity towards social amoebae, insect cells, and erythrocytes.
194 ets of genes whose expression is enriched in amoebae interacting with different species of bacteria,
195 eria, including sets that appear specific to amoebae interacting with Gram(+) or with Gram(-) bacteri
196 , characterized by precocious aggregation of amoebae into multicellular aggregates.
197                                 Injection of amoebae into the AC induced a robust neutrophil infiltra
198 racellular defect of the peptidase mutant in amoebae is explained by the loss of type II secretion.
199          Direct killing of host cells by the amoebae is likely to be the driving factor that underlie
200 emonstrate that L. pneumophila virulence for amoebae is required for maximal intrapulmonary growth of
201            Here we report the discovery that amoebae kill by ingesting distinct pieces of living huma
202 ere it was uncovered as a mechanism by which amoebae kill cells.
203                       Microscopy, fungal and amoebae killing assays, and phagocytosis assays revealed
204                                       Inside amoebae, L. pneumophila was detected in 13.9% (6/43) of
205  all other known eukaryotic cells, Naegleria amoebae lack interphase microtubules; this suggests that
206 ical for Legionella pneumophila infection of amoebae, macrophages, and mice.
207 sults are consistent with the view that soil amoebae may contribute to the selection and maintenance
208 vision of a single cell, genetically diverse amoebae may enter an aggregate and, if one lineage has a
209 rmis and support the hypothesis that inhaled amoebae may potentiate intrapulmonary growth of L. pneum
210 can efficiently infect mice, indicating that amoebae may represent an environmental vector within whi
211                Further exploration of social amoebae microbiomes may help us understand the roles of
212                                              Amoebae microbiomes were distinct from the microbiomes o
213 pply and reached mean densities of 2.5 log10 amoebae.mL(-1) in garden hose water.
214 llanii and Hartmannella vermiformis, the two amoebae most commonly linked to cases of disease.
215 dominant mixotrophs, the mixotrophic testate amoebae (MTA).
216 ed effector that subverts encystation of the amoebae natural host, and the paradoxical hMDMs' pro-inf
217 equivalent survival rates when cultured with amoebae, nematodes, and macrophages.
218         When confronted with starvation, the amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum initiate a developme
219 microscope, acceleration was increased until amoebae of Dictyostelium discoideum were "stalled" or no
220                                  Free-living amoebae of the genus Acanthamoeba can cause severe and c
221                                      Enteric amoebae of the genus Entamoeba travel from host to host
222 e types and by its failure to hybridize with amoebae of two other genera (Hartmannella vermiformis an
223 nwhile, the inactivation and infectivity (to amoebae) of the released L. pneumophila were studied.
224 enetic screen utilizing the growth of mutant amoebae on a variety of bacteria as a phenotypic readout
225 hin phagocytes and transmission between host amoebae or macrophages.
226 y noxious substances to other cells, such as amoebae or phagocytes.
227  aquatic environments, but replicates within amoebae or the alveolar macrophages of immunocompromised
228    Because Msp is not required for growth in amoebae, other proteins which are important for growth i
229                                          The amoebae penetrated Descemet's membrane within 24 hours o
230  mouse) and uninfected H. vermiformis (10[6] amoebae per mouse).
231 ries of dilutions and determining the MPN of amoebae present from statistical tables.
232    Chemotaxing neutrophils and Dictyostelium amoebae produce in their plasma membranes the signaling
233       We cultured, on Acanthamoeba polyphaga amoebae, pulmonary samples from 196 Tunisian patients wi
234                         In this manner these amoebae reap the benefits of an asexual reproductive exi
235 hin the sorus, and by 72 h 4% or less of the amoebae remain as spores, while most cells are now nonvi
236 in the early interaction with macrophages or amoebae remains elusive.
237                                Dictyostelium amoebae represent an intriguing synthetic biological cha
238 d not associate with the other naked, lobose amoebae represented by Acanthamoeba and Hartmannella, in
239                                   While some amoebae reproduce sexually, many amoebae (e.g., Acantham
240 24 h, 99 and 78% of infected macrophages and amoebae, respectively, contain cytoplasmic bacteria.
241 opmental transitions for solitary and social amoebae, respectively.
242 cterial proteins that promote replication in amoebae restrict growth in macrophages.
243 h fungal species, exposure of yeast cells to amoebae resulted in an increase in hyphal cells.
244                   Genome sequences of social amoebae reveal the presence of terpene cyclases (TCs) in
245 of Dictylostelium discoideum occurs when the amoebae run out of their bacterial prey and aggregate in
246 art of the most represented genera composing amoebae's microbiome.
247  Alpha-diversity was unsurprisingly lower in amoebae samples compared with soil, but beta-diversity b
248 mpared with soil, but beta-diversity between amoebae samples was higher than between soil samples.
249                    As predators of bacteria, amoebae select for traits that allow bacteria to become
250 predicted from a new phylogeny of arcellinid amoebae show a striking resemblance to microscopic fossi
251                                Dictyostelium amoebae show striking electrotaxis in an applied direct
252                            Shelled (testate) amoebae stand out as an exception with rich documented d
253  amoebae to secrete cAMP, toward which other amoebae stream, forming multicellular mounds that differ
254                       Pathogenic free-living amoebae, such as Acanthamoeba species, Balamuthia mandri
255                                  Free-living amoebae, such as Naegleria fowleri, Acanthamoeba spp., a
256 omplex for pointed ends and its abundance in amoebae suggest that in vivo all actin filament pointed
257  bent under centrifugal force in all stalled amoebae, suggesting that this pseudopod is very dense in
258 that Dictyostelium as well as the other soil amoebae that synthesize cycloartenol evolved from algal
259 xillins I and II in the cortex of vegetative amoebae, the leading edge of motile cells, and the cleav
260   Legionella pneumophila has co-evolved with amoebae, their natural hosts.
261 alysis of Entamoeba extracts showed that the amoebae themselves contain catecholamines and at least o
262              Sex determination in the social amoebae thus appears to use regulators that are unrelate
263                               Application of amoebae to a library of mutants of S. elongatus led to t
264 lium transitions from a group of unicellular amoebae to an integrated multicellular organism.
265 nding protein (MBP) mediates adhesion of the amoebae to corneal epithelial cells, a key first step in
266 ) is a polyketide that induces Dictyostelium amoebae to differentiate as prestalk cells.
267 g body and the constituent cells change from amoebae to either refractile spores or vacuolated stalk
268 s on the ocular surface, which stimulate the amoebae to elaborate a 133-kDa pathogenic protease.
269 for some S cell functions and for vegetative amoebae to feed on live bacteria.
270         In Dictyostelium, starvation induces amoebae to form migratory slugs that translocate from su
271 otor behaviour of all living organisms, from amoebae to humans.
272 ting a vast diversity of hosts, ranging from amoebae to humans.
273 n widely expressed in organisms ranging from amoebae to mammals that has been shown to play vital rol
274                               The binding of amoebae to mannose-GPs was blocked by free methyl-alpha-
275 Subsequent steps in pathogenesis require the amoebae to penetrate and degrade collagen.
276  the cytosol of human macrophage (hMDMs) and amoebae to rapidly degrade glycogen to generate cytosoli
277             Starvation induces Dictyostelium amoebae to secrete cAMP, toward which other amoebae stre
278      We used remains from plants and testate amoebae to study historical changes in peatland biologic
279  macrophage-like U937 cells and Hartmannella amoebae to the same degree as did wild-type legionellae,
280 ability of prespore Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae to undergo redifferentiation so as to reestablis
281 e decreased abundance of mixotrophic testate amoebae under drier conditions (R(2) = .4207; p < .001).
282 rain to be 40- to 80-fold more infective for amoebae, unequivocally demonstrating that Cas2 facilitat
283 izontally transmitted chlamydiae residing in amoebae was a result of processes occurring at the infec
284  Inhibition of amoebapore gene expression in amoebae was obtained following transfection with a hybri
285  plasma membrane of Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae, was postulated previously to play a role in pha
286 vering protein from Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae, we have identified a mammalian form of severin
287 e demonstrate that major lineages of testate amoebae were already diversified before the Sturtian gla
288                The most common associates of amoebae were classified to order Chlamydiales and genus
289                             Giant viruses of amoebae were discovered serendipitously in 2003; they ar
290           Subsequently, these 13C-prelabeled amoebae were infected with L. pneumophila wild type or s
291 es for Cn after ingestion by macrophages and amoebae were similar.
292 ng point more than 5 mm, indicating that the amoebae were viable.
293 lustrate the potential for other free-living amoebae, which are not normally associated with human di
294 seminated by horizontal gene transfer within amoebae, which are permissive hosts for either intracell
295  environment, M. marinum also interacts with amoebae, which may serve as a natural reservoir for this
296 e well-studied Dictyostelium discoideum, are amoebae whose life cycle includes both a single-cellular
297  conditioned media obtained after incubating amoebae with the host cells.
298  is important for the general fitness of the amoebae with the mutant strain displaying a substantial
299 a survives and replicates in macrophages and amoebae within a specialized phagosome that does not fus
300 amoeba species are among the most ubiquitous amoebae, yet Acanthamoeba keratitis is remarkably rare.

 
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