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Balamuthia and Acanthamoeba-binding antibodies in West African human sera
Authors:Albrecht F. Kiderlen  Elke Radam  Edgard V. Adjogoua  Chantal Akoua-Koffi  Fabian H. Leendertz
Affiliation:a Robert Koch Institute, Cellular Immunology Unit P22, Berlin, Germany
b California Department of Health Services, Viral and Rickettsial Diseases Laboratory, Richmond, USA
c Department of Epidemic Viruses, Adiopodourmé, 01 BP 490, Abidjan
d Robert Koch Institute, Emerging Zoonoses Unit NG2, Berlin, Germany
Abstract:Little is known about the prevalence of Balamuthia mandrillaris amoebae and Balamuthia amoebic encephalitis in Africa. As an approach, relative concentrations of amoebae-binding serum antibodies (Ab) were assessed by flow cytometry using formaldehyde-fixed B. mandrillaris, Acanthamoeba lenticulata 72-2 and Acanthamoeba castellanii 1BU amoebae for specific Ab capture (B.m.-Ab, A.l.-Ab, A.c.-Ab). One hundred and ninety-two sera from West African (Côte d’Ivoire) donors aged 11-95 years (mean 38 a; 51% males), and living in villages surrounded by rainforest near the Liberian border, were tested and related to reference sera from Berlin. While B.m.-Ab tended to increase with donor age, A.l.-Ab and A.c.-Ab did not. Accordingly, B.m.-Ab correlated only weakly with A.l.-Ab or A.c.-Ab. Of the nine individuals with the highest B.m.-Ab concentrations, most were elderly (mean 58 a), male (78%), and professed intensive outdoor activity (hunting, farming). Only three of these sera also showed elevated A.l.-Ab, and none elevated A.c.-Ab.
Keywords:AAE, Acanthamoeba amoebic encephalitis   Ab, antibody   A.c.-Ab, Acanthamoeba castellanii-binding Ab   AK, Acanthamoeba keratitis   A.l.-Ab, A. lenticulata-binding Ab   BAE, Balamuthia amoebic encephalitis   B.m.-Ab, B. mandrillaris-binding Ab   CC, correlation coefficient   FACScan, fluorescence-activated cell scan
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