AI Article Synopsis

  • The unicellular parasite is responsible for giardiasis, a widespread gastrointestinal illness, and attaches to human intestines using a specialized organelle called the ventral disc.
  • Researchers are investigating how this attachment occurs by measuring the detachment characteristics and adhesion forces of individual trophozoites on smooth surfaces using a technique called fluidic force microscopy.
  • The study found that the adhesion forces of trophozoites exhibit unique patterns compared to other eukaryotic cells, indicating distinct mechanisms of attachment and detachment at the molecular level.

Article Abstract

The unicellular parasite is the causative agent of giardiasis, a gastrointestinal disease with global spread. In its trophozoite form, can adhere to the human intestinal epithelium and a variety of other, artificial surfaces. Its attachment is facilitated by a unique microtubule-based attachment organelle, the so-called ventral disc. The mechanical function of the ventral disc, however, is still debated. Earlier studies postulated that a dynamic negative pressure under the ventral disc, generated by persistently beating flagella, mediates the attachment. Later studies suggested a suction model based on structural changes of the ventral discs, substrate clutching or grasping, or unspecific contact forces. In this study, we aim to contribute to the understanding of attachment by investigating detachment characteristics and determining adhesion forces of single trophozoites on a smooth glass surface (RMS = 1.1 ± 0.2 nm) by fluidic force microscopy (FluidFM)-based single-cell force spectroscopy (SCFS). Briefly, viable adherent trophozoites were approached with a FluidFM micropipette, immobilized to the micropipette aperture by negative pressure, and detached from the surface by micropipette retraction while retract force curves were recorded. These force curves displayed novel and so far undescribed characteristics for a microorganism, namely, gradual force increase on the pulled trophozoite, with localization of adhesion force shortly before cell detachment length. Respective adhesion forces reached 7.7 ± 4.2 nN at 1 μm s pulling speed. Importantly, this unique force pattern was different from that of other eukaryotic cells such as or oral keratinocytes, considered for comparison in this study. The latter both displayed a force pattern with force peaks of different values or force plateaus (for keratinocytes) indicative of breakage of molecular bonds of cell-anchored classes of adhesion molecules or membrane components. Furthermore, the attachment mode of trophozoites was mechanically resilient to tensile forces, when the pulling speeds were raised up to 10 μm s and adhesion forces increased to 28.7 ± 10.5 nN. Taken together, comparative SCSF revealed novel and unique retract force curve characteristics for attached , suggesting a ligand-independent suction mechanism, that differ from those of other well described eukaryotes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4nr00122bDOI Listing

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