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Featured researches published by Ann Cali.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1993

Septata Intestinalis N. G., N. Sp., an Intestinal Microsporidian Associated With Chronic Diarrhea and Dissemination In Aids Patients

Ann Cali; Donald P. Kotler; Jan M. Orenstein

ABSTRACT. Intestinal microsporidiosis in patients diagnosed with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and having chronic diarrhea was first reported in 1985 and the associated microsporidian was named Enterocytozoon bieneusi. the intracellular developmental cycle of E. bieneusi in enterocytes has been demonstrated and many cases have been reported worldwide. This report presents the life cycle of a second intestinal microsporidian, associated with the same symptoms, in five AIDS patients. This new microsporidian also infects enterocytes but its pathology and morphology differ from that of E. bieneusi. It involves lamina propria macrophages, fibroblasts, and endothelial cells and can disseminate to infect other parts of the body, e.g. the kidney and gall bladder. the parasite cycle includes development of rounded uninucleate and elongated bi‐ or tetranucleate cells without the formation of plasmodial stages. Sporogony is similar to the more typical development of microsporidia with sporoblast morphogenesis occurring after the last cell division. the development of cells within chambers of a septate, honeycomb‐like, parasite‐secreted fibrillar network and surrounded by a parasitophorous vacuole, however, is unique to this microsporidian, justifying the establishment of a new genus and species, Septata intestinalis n. g., n. sp.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1995

A Cell Culture System for Study of the Development of Toxoplasma gondii Bradyzoites

Louis M. Weiss; Denise Laplace; Peter M. Takvorian; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Ann Cali; Murray Wittner

ABSTRACT. Toxoplasma gondii is a ubiquitous apicomplexan parasite and a major opportunistic pathogen under AIDS‐induced conditions, where it causes encephalitis when the bradyzoite (cyst) stage is reactivated. A bradyzoite‐specific Mab, 74.1.8, reacting with a 28 kDa antigen, was used to study bradyzoite development in vitro by immuno‐electron microscopy and immunofluorescence in human fibroblasts infected with ME49 strain T. gondii. Bradyzoites were detected in tissue culture within 3 days of infection. Free floating cyst‐like structures were also identified. Western blotting demonstrated the expression of bradyzoite antigens in these free‐floating cysts as well as in the monolayer. Bradyzoite development was increased by using media adjusted to pH 6.8 or 8.2. The addition of γ‐interferon at day 3 of culture while decreasing the total number of cysts formed prevented tachyzoite overgrowth and enabled study of in vitro bradyzoites for up to 25 days. The addition of IL‐6 increased the number of cysts released into the medium and increased the number of cysts formed at pH 7.2. Confirmation of bradyzoite development in vitro was provided by electron microscopy. It is possible that the induction of an acute phase response in the host cell may be important for bradyzoite differentiation. This system should allow further studies on the effect of various agents on the development of bradyzoites.


Cell | 2015

Phosphatidylserine Vesicles Enable Efficient En Bloc Transmission of Enteroviruses

Ying Han Chen; Wenli Du; Marne C. Hagemeijer; Peter M. Takvorian; Cyrilla Pau; Ann Cali; Christine A. Brantner; Erin S. Stempinski; Patricia S. Connelly; Hsin Chieh Ma; Ping Jiang; Eckard Wimmer; Grégoire Altan-Bonnet; Nihal Altan-Bonnet

A central paradigm within virology is that each viral particle largely behaves as an independent infectious unit. Here, we demonstrate that clusters of enteroviral particles are packaged within phosphatidylserine (PS) lipid-enriched vesicles that are non-lytically released from cells and provide greater infection efficiency than free single viral particles. We show that vesicular PS lipids are co-factors to the relevant enterovirus receptors in mediating subsequent infectivity and transmission, in particular to primary human macrophages. We demonstrate that clustered packaging of viral particles within vesicles enables multiple viral RNA genomes to be collectively transferred into single cells. This study reveals a novel mode of viral transmission, where enteroviral genomes are transmitted from cell-to-cell en bloc in membrane-bound PS vesicles instead of as single independent genomes. This has implications for facilitating genetic cooperativity among viral quasispecies as well as enhancing viral replication.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1998

Brachiola vesicularum, n. g., n. sp., a new microsporidium associated with AIDS and myositis

Ann Cali; Peter M. Takvorian; Sharon R. Lewin; Michael Rendel; Corazon S. Sian; Murray Wittner; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Elaine M. Keohane; Louis M. Weiss

Brachiola vesicularum, n. g., n. sp., is a new microsporidium associated with AIDS and myositis. Biopsied muscle tissue, examined by light and electron microscopy, revealed the presence of organisms developing in direct contact with muscle cell cytoplasm and fibers. No other tissue types were infected. All parasite stages contain diplokaryotic nuclei and all cell division is by binary fission. Sporogony is disporoblastic, producing 2.9 times 2 μm diplokaryotic spores containing 8‐10 coils of the polar filament arranged in one to three rows, usually two. Additionally, this microsporidium produces electron‐dense extracellular secretions and vesiculotubular appendages similar to Nosema algerae. However, the production of protoplasmic extensions which may branch and terminate in extensive vesiculotubular structures is unique to this parasite. Additionally, unlike Nosema algerae, its development occurred at warm blooded host temperature (37‐38° C) and unlike Nosema connori, which disseminates to all tissue types, B. vesicularum infected only muscle cells. Thus, a new genus and species is proposed. Because of the similarities with the genus Nosema, this new genus is placed in the family Nosematidae. Successful clearing of this infection (both clinically and histologically) resulted from treatment with albendazole and itraconozole.


Human Pathology | 1992

A microsporidian previously undescribed in humans, infecting enterocytes and macrophages, and associated with diarrhea in an acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patient

Jan M. Orenstein; Monica Tenner; Ann Cali; Donald P. Kotler

To date, the only microsporidian that has been associated with diarrhea and weight loss in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients is the newly identified Enterocytozoon bieneusi. A second species is now described that was associated with intestinal symptoms in a 32-year-old, human immunodeficiency virus- seropositive, Native American male homosexual. Stool studies and routine light microscopy of multiple small intestinal biopsies that showed atrophy with acute and chronic inflammation were without apparent pathogens. Light microscopy of semi-thin plastic sections, cytochemical stains of paraffin sections, and ultrastructural studies revealed extensive microsporidial infection of enterocytes and submucosal macrophages. No other pathogens were identified. Unlike E bieneusi, this microsporidian appeared to develop within septated parasitophorous vacuoles, and lacked polar disks and clear clefts. It most closely resembled, but was distinguishable from, members of the genus Encephalitozoon. Awareness of the microsporidia as potential opportunists in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome patients is increasing the incidence of identification of these organisms.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1998

The molecular characterization of the major polar tube protein gene from Encephalitozoon hellem, a microsporidian parasite of humans

Elaine M. Keohane; George A. Orr; Hong Shan Zhang; Peter M. Takvorian; Ann Cali; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Murray Wittner; Louis M. Weiss

The microsporidia are obligate intracellular protozoan parasites of increasing importance as human pathogens, which are characterized by a small resistant spore with a single polar filament that coils around the sporoplasm. When stimulated, the polar filament rapidly everts out of the spore to form a hollow polar tube through which the sporoplasm passes, thus serving as a unique mechanism of transmission. A genomic library of the human microsporidium Encephalitozoon hellem was screened using a polyclonal rabbit antibody (anti-PTP Eh55) produced to the major HPLC purified polar tube protein (PTP) of E. hellem. This antibody localized to intrasporal polar filaments and extrasporal polar tubes of E. hellem by immunogold electron microscopy confirming the polar tube specificity of the antibody. A total of 14 anti-PTP Eh55 reactive genomic clones were identified and purified. A PTP gene was identified consisting of 1362 bp coding for 453 amino acids. The N-terminus of the translated protein consists of aputative N-terminal signal sequence of 22 amino acids, which when cleaved results in a mature protein of 431 amino acids with a predicted molecular mass of 43 kDa. The protein has a high proline content (14.6%) and contains a central domain of six alternating tandem repeats of 20 amino acids. After ligation of the gene into a glutathione S-transferase (GST) expression vector, a fusion protein was produced that reacted by immunoblotting with the polar tube specific anti-PTP Eh55. The gene was present as a single copy in the genome and there was no homology with other known genes. As the polar tube is a critical structure for the transmission of this organism to a new host cell, further study of PTPs may lead to the development of new therapeutic strategies and diagnostic tests.


Infection and Immunity | 2006

Identification of a New Spore Wall Protein from Encephalitozoon cuniculi

Yanji Xu; Peter M. Takvorian; Ann Cali; Fang Wang; Hong Zhang; George A. Orr; Louis M. Weiss

ABSTRACT Microsporidia form environmentally resistant spores that are critical for their host-to-host transmission and persistence in the environment. The spore walls of these organisms are composed of two layers, the exospore and the endospore. Two spore wall proteins (SWP1 and SWP2) have been previously identified in members of the Encephalitozoonidae family. These proteins localize to the exospore. The endospore is known to contain chitin, and a putative glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored chitin deacetylase has been localized to the plasmalemma-endospore interface. Using proteomic techniques, we have identified a new spore wall protein (SWP3) that is located in the endospore. The gene for this protein is located on chromosome 1 and corresponds to the open reading frame ECU01_1270. SWP3 is predicted to have a signal peptide and to be GPI anchored. Consistent with these modifications, two-dimensional electrophoresis demonstrated that SWP3 has an acidic pI and a molecular mass of <20 kDa. By immunoelectron microscopy, this protein was found on the cell surface during sporogony and in the endospore in mature spores. SWP3 has several potential O-glycosylation sites, and it is possible that it is a mannosylated protein like the major polar tube protein (PTP1).


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2000

The Effects of Elevated Temperatures and Various Time‐Temperature Combinations on the Development of Brachiola (Nosema) algerae N. Comb. in Mammalian Cell Culture

Paul M. Lowman; Peter M. Takvorian; Ann Cali

Abstract Nosema algerae Vávra and Undeen 1970, a microsporidian known to cause infection in mosquitoes, develops in mammalian cell cultures at 24–35 °C and in the tails and footpads of athymic mice. More recently it has been reported to grow at 38 °C in human cell culture. The present study is a two-part temperature/development examination. The first part examines the development of N. algerae in rabbit kidney cell culture at 29 °C, which permits the formation of functional spores within 72 h, and compares the effect of elevated temperatures (36.0, 36.5, 37 °C) on parasite development. At these elevated temperatures, N. algerae infects but undergoes only one or two proliferative divisions, with no evidence of sporogony by 72 h post-inoculation. During this time, however, the host cells continue to divide resulting in fewer infected cells over time and giving the appearance of a diminished parasitemia. Additionally, at 37 °C some organisms degenerate/hibernate by 72 h while others remain viable/active. It is not until 96 h that the parasites appear in large clusters of proliferative stages in the few host cells that are infected. By 120 h post-inoculation, proliferative cells, sporoblasts, and early spores are observed. These results suggest that elevated temperatures impede proliferation rates and the onset of sporogony. The second part of this study evaluates developmental changes in N. algerae when incubation temperatures and times are varied during parasite growth, resulting in abnormal parasite morphology. These abnormalities were not present when parasites were grown at constant temperature (29–37 °C). This report demonstrates that N. algerae can successfully develop at high temperatures (37 °C), justifying its taxonomic relocation to the genus Brachiola.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1994

Ribosomal RNA sequences of Enterocytozoon bieneusi, Septata intestinalis and Ameson michaelis : phylogenetic construction and structural correspondence

Xiaolong Zhu; Murray Wittner; Herbert B. Tanowitz; Ann Cali; Louis M. Weiss

ABSTRACT. The microsporidian species Enterocytozoon bieneusi, Septata intestinalis and Ameson michaelis were compared by using sequence data of their rRNA gene segments, which were amplified by polymerized chain reaction and directly sequenced. The forward primer 530f (5′‐GTGCCATCCAGCCGCGG‐3′) was in the small subunit rRNA (SSU‐rRNA) and the reverse primer 580r (5′‐GGTCCGTGTTTCAAGACGG‐3′) was in the large subunit rRNA (LSU‐rRNA). We have utilized these sequence data, the published data on Encephalitozoon cuniculi and Encephalitozoon hellem and our cloned SSU‐rRNA genes from E. bieneusi and S. intestinalis to develop a phylogenetic tree for the microsporidia involved in human infection. The higher sequence similarities demonstrated between S. intestinalis and E. cuniculi support the placement of S. intestinalis in the family Encephalitozoonidae. This method of polymerized chain reaction rRNA phylogeny allows the establishment of phylogenetic relationships on limiting material where culture and electron microscopy are difficult or impossible and can be applied to archival material to expand the molecular phylogenetic analysis of the phylum Microspora. In addition, the highly variable region (E. coli numbering 590–650) and intergenic spacer regions in the microsporidia were noted to have structural correspondence, suggesting the possibility that they are coevolving.


Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 2003

Ultrastructure and development of Pleistophora ronneafiei n. sp., a microsporidium (Protista) in the skeletal muscle of an immune-compromised individual.

Ann Cali; Peter M. Takvorian

Abstract This report provides a detailed ultrastructural study of the life cycle, including proliferative and sporogonic developmental stages, of the first Pleistophora species (microsporidium) obtained from an immune-incompetent patient. In 1985, the organism obtained from a muscle biopsy was initially identified as belonging to the genus Pleistophora, based on spore morphology and its location in a sporophorous vesicle. Since that initial report, at least two new microsporidial genera, Trachipleistophora and Brachiola, have been reported to infect the muscle tissue of immunologically compromised patients. Because Trachipleistophora development is similar to Pleistophora, and as Pleistophora was only known to occur in cold-blooded hosts, the question of the proper classification of this microsporidium arose. The information acquired in this study makes it possible to compare Pleistophora sp. (Ledford et al. 1985) to the known human infections and properly determine its correct taxonomic position. Our ultrastructural data have revealed the formation of multinucleate sporogonial plasmodia, a developmental characteristic of the genus Pleistophora and not Trachipleistophora. A comparison with other species of the genus supports the establishment of a new species. This parasite is given the name Pleistophora ronneafiei n. sp.

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Louis M. Weiss

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Herbert B. Tanowitz

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Elaine M. Keohane

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Kaya Ghosh

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Xiaolong Zhu

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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