ISSN: 0973-7510

E-ISSN: 2581-690X

Research Article | Open Access
Hiroki Yamanobe1, Shuntaro Hakozaki1, Yuta Saito1, Kazuma Yabuki1, Takeru Saito1, Tatsuya Sakai1, Sena Kobayashi1, Taiga Shimizu1, Ryota Saito1, Noriko Yamauchi2, Futoshi Siuzu3 and Yoichiro Sogame1
1Department of Applied Chemistry and Biochemistry, National Institute of Technology, Fukushima College, Iwaki, Fukushima 970-8034, Japan.
2Domain of Materials Science and Engineering, Faculty of Applied Science and Engineering,
Ibaraki University, Hitachi, Ibaraki 316-8511, Japan.
3Laboratory of Pathology, Department of Medical Technology, Kagawa Prefectural University of Health Sciences, Takamatsu, Kagawa 761-0123, Japan.
Article Number: 10676 | © The Author(s). 2025
J Pure Appl Microbiol. 2025;19(4):2884-2893. https://doi.org/10.22207/JPAM.19.4.27
Received: 09 June 2025 | Accepted: 18 September 2025 | Published online: 13 November 2025
Issue online: December 2025
Abstract

Encystment (resting cyst formation), a state of dormancy with extreme tolerance of environmental stresses, is the standard survival strategy used by protists in response to unfavorable environmental changes. Here, we investigated the relative tolerances of resting cysts and vegetative cells of the colpodid ciliate Colpoda cucullus to exposure to surfactants. The effects of four different types of surfactant, namely, anionic surfactant (SDS), cationic surfactant (benzalkonium chloride), zwitterionic surfactant (CHAPS), and non-ionic surfactant (NP-40), were tested on Colpoda resting cysts and vegetative cells. We found that resting cysts showed tolerance levels to the surfactants that were more than 100 times higher than those of vegetative cells. This study provides updated information on the tolerance of resting cysts with regard to how they can adapt to environmental stresses and human influences. Additionally, our results highlight the importance of considering resting cysts when using detergents for cleaning, which is crucial for preventing infectious diseases and promoting the One Health initiative in our daily lives.

Keywords

Dormancy, Detergent, Toxic Resistance, Infectious Disease, One Health, SDGs, Public Health

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© The Author(s) 2025. Open Access. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License which permits unrestricted use, sharing, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.