Abstract
Repeated passage of the 200-NIH strain of Entamoeba histolytica through cholesterol-enriched axenic growth medium induced marked increases in cholesterol, phosphoglucomutase and hexokinase levels and a less prominent rise in the protein content of amoebic cells. There was also pronounced enhancement of haemolytic activity and Concanavalin A (Con A) agglutinability of the culture, but no significant change was observed in glucose phosphate isomerase. These cholesterol-induced effects persisted to a large extent when amoebae were subsequently repassaged through normal axenic medium lacking exogenous cholesterol, but changes in cellular cholesterol and protein levels did not persist. Qualitatively similar results were obtained whether the sterol was layered as a film on the glass walls of the culture tubes or supplied as sonicated micells, but the latter was in general more effective.