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1.
Developmentally arrested nonfeeding infective larvae of hookworms resume development after entry into the host, presumably in response to a signal encountered during invasion. Logically, an initial step in the resumption of development might be the resumption of feeding. An in vitro assay for feeding is described for the third-stage larvae of the canine hookworm Ancylostoma caninum. Populations of larvae incubated under hostlike conditions in the presence of 10% canine serum resume feeding within 6 hr, as evidenced by the uptake of fluorescein-labeled bovine serum albumin. Feeding is dependent on the presence of canine serum, and peaks by 24 hr incubation. Maximal feeding levels occur at temperatures above 34 C with a gas phase of 5% CO2/95% air, whereas culture medium and pH are unimportant for feeding. Serum concentrations between 0.1% and 1.0% (v/v) initiate feeding, and the response peaks at approximately 8.0% serum. Serum triggers feeding within 6 hr and is not required for feeding to continue once initiated. The saturation effect and the trigger phenomenon suggest that the initiation of feeding is a receptor-mediated response.  相似文献   

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The survival of infective larvae of Ancylostoma caninum on outdoor grass plots was studied in 40 experiments over 1 year. Weather data were collected over the period. Mean larval survival from August to early November was 24 days (range 1 to 49), from December through February was 0 days, and from March to mid-August was 6.6 days (range 0 to 21). Moderate to high temperatures and substantial rainfall favored larval survival; low temperatures and rainfall favored larval destruction.  相似文献   

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A. caninum larvae responded to environmental and host stimuli with four behavioral phases of host-finding. (1) Snake-like movement was stimulated by warmth and by defined vibrations of the substratum. (2) Waving behavior was a prerequisite for the passive change-over to dog hairs. It was stimulated by heat radiation and by the CO2 content, warmth, and humidity of an air stream. (3) Creeping direction: the larvae were attracted by heat in temperature gradients as weak as 0.04 degrees C mm-1 and by dog hydrophilic skin surface extracts, but not by skin lipids or serum. (4) Penetration into agar was stimulated by heat, dog hydrophilic skin fraction, and dog serum. The effective component of serum had a molecular weight of between 5000 and 30,000 and proved to be a protein, since it lost its effectiveness after digestion with proteinases. Dog saliva, urine, milk, and various pure dog serum components did not stimulate penetration. A. caninum larvae were able to penetrate mouse skin repeatedly, but they did not follow the tracks of previously penetrated larvae in agar.  相似文献   

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Hookworms feed on blood, but the mechanism by which they lyse ingested erythrocytes is unknown. Here we show that Ancylostoma caninum, the common dog hookworm, expresses a detergent soluble, haemolytic factor. Activity was identified in both adult and larval stages, was heat-stable and unaffected by the addition of protease inhibitors, metal ions, chelators and reducing agents. Trypsin ablated lysis indicating that the haemolysin is a protein. A closely migrating doublet of hookworm proteins with apparent molecular weights of 60-65 kDa bound to the erythrocyte membrane after lysis of cells using both unlabeled and biotinylated detergent-solubilised hookworm extracts. In addition, separation of detergent-soluble parasite extracts using strong cation-exchange chromatography, resulted in purification of 60-65 kDa proteins with trypsin-sensitive haemolytic activity. Erythrocytes lysed with particulate, buffer-insoluble worm extracts were observed using scanning electron microscopy and appeared as red cell ghosts with approximately 100 nm diameter pores formed in the cell membranes. Red blood cell ghosts remained visible indicating that lysis was likely caused by pore formation and followed by osmotic disruption of the cell.  相似文献   

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Previous studies demonstrated that third-stage, developmentally arrested larvae of the canine hookworm Ancylostoma caninum resume feeding in vitro in response to canine serum and hostlike temperature. Experiments to determine the identity of the serum stimulus are described. Serum from several nonhost species stimulated feeding, but to levels lower than canine serum. Heating the serum to 57 C had no effect on its stimulatory ability. Dialysis reduced serum stimulatory activity by 50%, and ultrafiltration through 10- and 30-kDa molecular weight cut-off membranes decreased activity in both the filtrates and retentates similarly. Recombination of the filtrates and retentates restored activity to whole serum control levels. Commercial canine and bovine albumin stimulated feeding to serum control levels at 10 and 50 mg/ml, respectively. These results suggest that albumin and an unidentified low molecular weight compound(s) are capable of inducing in vitro feeding by A. caninum L3.  相似文献   

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Bhopale, V. M., Kupprion, E. K., Ashton, F. T., Boston, R., and Schad, G. A. 2001. Ancylostoma caninum: The finger cell neurons mediate thermotactic behavior by infective larvae of the dog hookworm. Experimental Parasitology 97, 70-76. In the amphids (anteriorly positioned, paired sensilla) of the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, the so-called finger cells (AFD), a pair of neurons, each of which ends in a cluster of microvilli-like projections, are known to be the primary thermoreceptors. A similar neuron pair in the amphids of the parasitic nematode Haemonchus contortus is also known to be thermoreceptive. The hookworm of dogs, Ancylostoma caninum, has apparent structural homologs of finger cells in its amphids. The neuroanatomy of the amphids of A. caninum and H. contortus is strikingly similar, and the amphidial cell bodies in the lateral ganglia of the latter nematode have been identified and mapped. When the lateral ganglia of first-stage larvae (L1) of A. caninum are examined with differential interference contrast microscopy, positional homologs of the recognized amphidial cell bodies in the lateral ganglia of H. contortus L1 are readily identified in A. caninum. The amphidial neurons in A. caninum were consequently given the same names as those of their apparent homologs in H. contortus. It was hypothesized that the finger cell neurons (AFD) might mediate thermotaxis by the skin-penetrating infective larvae (L3) of A. caninum. Laser microbeam ablation experiments with A. caninum were conducted, using the H. contortus L1 neuronal map as a guide. A. caninum L1 were anesthetized and the paired AFD class neurons were ablated. The larvae were then cultured to L3 and assayed for thermotaxis on a thermal gradient. L3 with ablated AFD-class neuron pairs showed significantly reduced thermotaxis compared to control groups. The thermoreceptive function of the AFD-class neurons associates this neuron pair with the host-finding process of the A. caninum infective larva and shows functional homology with the neurons of class AFD in C. elegans and in H. contortus.  相似文献   

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The developmentally arrested hookworm infective larva resumes development only after encountering specific host-mediated cues during invasion. These cues activate a signaling pathway that culminates in the resumption of development. In Ancylostoma caninum, activation is characterised by the resumption of feeding and the release of excretory/secretory products required for infection. The dauer stage of the free-living nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a developmentally arrested stage analogous to the hookworm infective larva. Dauer larvae exit developmental arrest in response to environmental cues that indicate favorable conditions for reproduction and growth. Because of the similarity between dauer recovery and activation, exit from dauer provides a model for hookworm larval activation. An insulin-signaling pathway has been implicated in controlling exit from developmental arrest in both C. elegans dauers and A. caninum larvae. To further investigate the role of insulin signaling in hookworm larval activation, the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase inhibitor LY294002 was tested for its effect on in vitro activation using the resumption of feeding as a marker for activation. LY294002 prevented feeding in A. caninum infective larvae stimulated with host serum filtrate and a glutathione-analogue, the muscarinic agonist arecoline, or the cell permeable cGMP-analogue 8-bromo-cGMP. Similar results were seen with the congeneric hookworm Ancylostoma ceylanicum. These data suggest that an insulin-signaling pathway mediates activation in hookworm larvae, as in C. elegans, and that the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase inhibitor acts downstream of the cGMP and muscarinic signaling steps in the pathway. In A. caninum, LY294002 had no effect on the release of excretory/secretory products associated with activation, suggesting that the secretory pathway diverges from the activation pathway upstream of the phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase step. These results provide additional support for the insulin-signaling pathway as the primarily pathway for activation to parasitism in hookworm larvae.  相似文献   

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Zinc sulfide in intestinal cell granules of Ancylostoma caninum adults   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A source of confusion has existed since the turn of the century about the reddish brown, weakly birefringent "sphaerocrystals" located in the intestines of strongyle nematodes, Strongylus and Ancylostoma. X-ray diffraction and energy dispersive spectrometric analyses were used for accurate determination of the crystalline order and elemental composition of the granules in the canine hookworm Ancylostoma caninum. The composition of the intestinal pigmented granules was identified unequivocally as zinc sulfide. It seems most probable that the granules serve to detoxify high levels of metallic ions (specifically zinc) present due to the large intake of host blood.  相似文献   

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Thrombus formation is a crucial factor in the precipitation of unstable angina or myocardial infarction. Recently, several anticoagulant serine protease inhibitors have been identified from adult Ancylostoma caninum hookworms. One of them, A. caninum anticoagulant peptide c2 (AcAPc2), can inhibit the activity of factor VIIa/tissue factor complex to exert its antithrombotic effect. However, it is difficult to adopt traditional expression and purification systems to yield high-purity recombinant AcAPc2 (rAcAPc2). Here, we employed a simple method to produce high-yield and high-purity rAcAPc2. We obtained the full-length double-stranded cDNA encoding AcAPc2 by overlapping PCR and cloned it into an intein-based expression vector. The AcAPc2 cDNA was expressed in Escherichia coli and comprised 30% of the total bacterial proteins. The expressed rAcAPc2 was purified by cleaving the fused chitin-binding domain at pH 7.2. Finally, we produced a high yield of rAcAPc2 at a purity of greater than 98%. Importantly, the generated rAcAPc2 prolonged the prothrombin time (PT) and activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) of human plasma in vitro in a dose-dependent manner. Therefore, this method to generate the high-purity and bioactive rAcAPc2 may contribute to the scientific research on its biological function and the treatment of thrombotic diseases.  相似文献   

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Aspartate transaminase level was significantly increased in intestine of experimentals that received multiple doses of infection. The level of alanine transaminase rose to a significant value in liver of mice infected with multiple doses. Rise of transaminases is correlated with the necrosis (disruption of intestina) hepatic cells in infected mice. Changes and/or the distribution of aspartate transaminase and alanine transaminase with regard to the dosage is discussed.  相似文献   

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The adult hookworm Ancylostoma caninum releases a proteolytic enzyme which is thought to be essential for its adaption to parasitism. The protease was purified from parasite extracts by ion-exchange chromatography followed by gel filtration and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The purified enzyme exhibited a molecular weight of 37,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and had an NH2-terminal sequence of Arg-His-His-Gln-Pro-Lys-Val-Ala-Leu-Leu-Gly-Ala-His-Gly-Gly-Ile. Using 125I-fibrin as substrate, the enzyme displayed optimal activity at pH 9-11 and was inactivated by dialysis against EDTA. The enzyme degraded [3H]elastin and both elastin and trypsin-labile glycoproteins in a rat vascular smooth muscle extracellular matrix. Antiserum raised to the protease in rabbits cross-reacted with extracts from the infective larval stage of A. caninum, suggesting that the production of the enzyme begins in an earlier developmental stage of the parasite life cycle. The role of the protease in the histolytic and anticlotting processes of the hookworm and its importance in immunity to ancylostomiasis is discussed.  相似文献   

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