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1.
We examined the thermokinetic behaviors of infective third-stage larvae (L3) of the rodent parasitic nematode Strongyloides ratti on temperature gradients using an in vitro agarose tracking assay method. Observed behaviors included both negative and positive thermokineses, the direction of movement depending both on the gradient temperature at which larvae were initially placed and on prior experience of culture temperature. Larvae isolated from rat feces cultured at 25 degrees C and placed on a gradient at temperatures between 22 degrees and 29 degrees C tended to move toward higher temperatures. At higher placement temperatures, most larvae moved little and showed no directional response, whereas at lower placement temperatures, many migrated toward cooler temperatures. At placement temperatures of 20 degrees C or below, few or no larvae moved toward the zone of higher temperature. Larvae isolated from rat feces cultured at 20 degrees C tended to migrate to a high temperature area regardless of placed temperature. Those cultured at 30 degrees C did not respond to the temperature gradient. L3 cultured at 30 degrees C were significantly less infective to rats than those cultured at 25 degrees or 20 degrees C. Additional experiments were designed to demonstrate thermokinetic behaviors during the period after reaching the L3 stage. Larvae incubated in double distilled water (DDW) for 24 h at 37 degrees C lost their ability to respond to lower temperatures, while in those incubated in DDW at 15 degrees and 25 degrees C, responses were still apparent. The thermokinetic behavior of S. ratti L3 is affected by surrounding environmental temperatures and this may have an important role in host finding.  相似文献   

2.
The infective third-stage larvae (L3s) of Strongyloides ratti, a parasitic nematode in rodents, showed two types of chemokinesis on a gradient of sodium chloride (NaCl) in an in vitro agarose tracking assay. The types were a consistent directional avoidance behavior under unfavorable environmental conditions and a reduced avoidance behavior under favorable conditions. We examined the effects of treatments with glycolytic enzymes and lectins by analyzing the avoidance behavior. L-Fucose dehydrogenase, hyaluronidase, beta-glucosidase, alpha-mannosidase, beta-galactosidase, concanavalin A, wheat germ agglutinin and soybean agglutinin exhibited inhibitory or enhancive effects on chemokinesis. We also confirmed the sites of the amphids of L3s aside from the mouth at the anterior end by scanning electron microscopy, and that concanavalin A-binding sites existed in the vicinity of the amphids using lectin-histochemistry. The carbohydrate moieties in the amphids of S. ratti L3s may play an important role as chemosensors in perceiving environmental cues.  相似文献   

3.
The large intestine of a rat has been neglected almost completely as a site of Strongyloides sp. infection. We reported that adult Strongyloides ratti remained in the large intestine for more than 80 days, producing more number of infective larvae than small intestine adults, and therefore hypothesized that parasitism in this site could be a survival strategy. In wild rats, however, no study has focused on large intestine infections of Strongyloides. The present study revealed that 32.4% of 68 wild rats, Rattus norvegicus, had the infection of S. ratti in the large intestine, with an average of 4.7 worms. These worms harbored normal eggs in the uterus. In a laboratory experiment with S. ratti and Wister rats, daily output of infective larvae by 4.7 females in the large intestine was estimated to be 4,638.4, suggesting that a few parasites could play a role in the parasite transmission. Five species of nematode found in the wild rats showed seasonality in infection intensity, with highest intensities in March-May. The number of S. ratti in the large intestine was also highest in these months.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of fatty acids was studied on the developmental direction of Strongyloides ratti first-stage larvae (L1). The proportion of third-stage infective larvae increased markedly when L1 were cultured in faeces with added fatty acids such as palmitic (C16), stearic (C18), oleic (C18:1) and linoleic (C18:2) acids. Unsaturated fatty acids were more effective than saturated ones. Moreover, the proportion of infective larvae increased with quantity of linoleic acid but the triacylglycerols of any fatty acid had no effect. These results suggest that these free fatty acids cause physiological changes that determine the developmental course of L1 of S. ratti in nature.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Infective larvae of Strongyloides spp. have been shown to contain azocollytic enzymes which may aid in host skin penetration. Attempts to demonstrate classical, neutral pH-active collagenase activity in Strongyloides ratti were unsuccessful. In the current study, we investigated the presence of acidic collagenolytic activity in the infective larvae of Strongyloides ransomi, S. ratti, and S. stercoralis. All three species demonstrated collagenolytic activity in acidic homogenates as well as in neutral freeze-thaw fractions. Biochemical characterization of this collagenolytic activity from S. ratti and S. ransomi indicated that it was active over an acidic pH range, although it was stable at a neutral pH. This, along with molecular weight estimates and inhibitor susceptibilities, suggested that the collagenolytic activity was similar to vertebrate acidic cysteinyl proteinases. These studies also indicated that this activity is similar to the acidic cysteinyl proteinases in extracts of S. ransomi.  相似文献   

7.
Development of exact doses (less than 100) of Strongyloides venezuelensis third-stage larvae in adult Wistar rats was insignificant (mean proportion of 0.076 of the dose at day 8, n = 16) compared with a homogonic strain of S. ratti (0.538, n = 6; 0.726, n = 6) and heterogonic S. ratti (0.681, n = 6). Newly-weaned Wistars allowed development of a mean proportion of S. venezuelensis of 0.298 (n = 4) compared with 0.013 (n = 4) of the same sample of larvae in adult hosts. Experiments with 75Se-labelled larvae established that S. venezuelensis effectively failed to migrate from skin to intestine in adult animals, while mean proportions of 0.141 (n = 5) and 0.138 (n = 4) of the label was found in the intestines of newly-weaned rats 72 h after skin application. Labelled larvae of homogonic S. ratti migrated equally well in both age groups of host (0.350 and 0.358 in 12- and 3-week-olds respectively). Adult S. venezuelensis transferred surgically to the intestines of previously uninfected full-grown Wistars survived over a 21-day period to the same extent as either strain of S. ratti. Resistance of Wistar rats to S. venezuelensis therefore appears to affect the migratory stage preferentially. S. venezuelensis developed better in mature PVG inbred rats (mean = 0.301, n = 20). Studies of S. ratti showed that infections of both strains initiated by exact (less than 100) doses in Wistar rats had decayed to insignificance between days 26 and 32. The rate of loss of adults of the heterogonic strain was significantly greater than that for the homogonic. The egg content of worms declined as infection progressed and rats were idiosyncratic in their influence on parasite reproduction from the earliest time of sampling (8 d). It was established that 'autoinfection' was an unlikely feature of the biology of homogonic S. ratti following the surgical transfer of 450 first-stage larvae to the intestines of 8 adult Wistar rats. No evidence of infection appeared in the guts of these animals 8 days post-transfer. The significance of these results in terms of the biology of Strongyloides spp. naturally occurring in the rat is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
The migration of infective larvae of Strongyloides ratti has been examined in C57Bl/6 mice after percutaneous infection of the anterior abdominal wall. Lateral migration of larvae through the skin and subcutaneous tissues was not seen. Large numbers of larvae were recovered from the muscles between 2 and 24 hours after infection and larvae were seen in the cerebrospinal fluid 24 and 48 hours after infection. Insignificant numbers of larvae were seen in the blood, serosal cavities, liver, spleen, kidneys, brain or nasopharynx. Larvae arrived in the lungs between 24 and 72 hours after infection and worms were first noted in the small intestines at 48 hours. It is concluded that larvae migrate preferentially to the muscles and CSF before passing to the lungs, but the exact mode of travel is uncertain.  相似文献   

9.
Previous indications using radiolabelled larvae that Strongyloides ratti free-living infective larvae lose a surface coat during penetration of the skin were further investigated by transmission electron microscopy of the cuticle of S. ratti infective larvae in the free-living stage, after penetration of mouse skin, and after migration to the lungs. These studies demonstrated the presence of a faint electron-dense surface coat external to the epicuticle on free-living worms which was absent from larvae recovered from the skin and lungs. When free-living infective larvae were incubated in 10% CO2 at 37 C and then examined with phase-contrast microscopy, worms were observed in the process of losing this coat. These observations confirm the hypothesis that S. ratti infective larvae lose a surface coat during penetration of the skin.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of oxygen and carbon dioxide concentration on the development of the free-living stages of Strongyloides ratti in axenic culture was examined. Hatching of S. ratti eggs was inhibited at very low oxygen levels. Development of all organisms was inhibited in medium gassed with less than 4% O2 in 0.03% CO2 with the remainder N2. Between 8 and 21% O2 there was no significant difference in the percentage developing directly to filariform larvae, free-living females, or free-living males. Cultures gassed with CO2 concentrations greater than 1% in 21% O2 with the remainder N2 manifested inhibited development to filariform larvae, whereas concentrations between 5 and 7.5% enhanced development to free-living females. There was a positive effect on increasing the CO2 concentration from 0.03% to 5% on development to filariform larvae and male worms at levels of 1% and 2% oxygen in nitrogen, respectively. Direction of development, either directly to the filariform larva or to the free-living female, was influenced by CO2 and O2 concentrations encountered by the egg or the newly hatched larva of the parasitic female in axenic culture. The axenic culture system permits an important experimental approach to the study of factors modulating the differentiation of the free-living stages of Strongyloides.  相似文献   

11.
The initial pathway of skin penetrating larvae of Strongyloides ratti inside the host is not systemic and could well involve local components of the lymphatic system. The experiments described were an attempt to detect an effect on immunity depending on whether larvae of a challenge infection were committed to a pathway through heavily primed or lightly primed lymph nodes. Female rats were immunised by subcutaneous injection into the right forearm of 10,000 [corrected] heat killed, or 1000 live, third stage larvae of S. ratti. Animals given living parasites were placed on a diet containing 0.1 or 0.2% thiabendazole 48h or 36h after infection. Challenge infections of less than 100 larvae ('exact' doses) were applied on day 21 to either the right or left flank and, similarly, to controls that had received the anthelmintic but not the priming infection. Heat killed parasites elicited no response at all. Priming with live larvae stimulated a significant immunity (16% and 37% depression in 2 experiments), but there was no difference between rats whose challenge was on the same side as the priming dose and those which had the contralateral treatment. The significance of these results to theories of pathfinding in general, and to practical immunology, is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
13.
There were no differences in mean intestinal worm burdens 8 days after subcutaneous injection of 4000 infective larvae of Strongyloides ratti into rats in dioestrus, pro-oestrus, oestrus and metoestrus. Thus, changes in the hormonal environment of the migrating larvae dependent on the oestrous cycle did not alter the worms' destination or affect their potential for development. In particular, the results are prima facie evidence that prolactin is not, on its own, responsible for the re-orientation of larvae in the tissues of nursing mothers. Other sources of variability in experimental S. ratti infections are analysed and the 'exact dose' technique offered as a corrective for some procedural errors.  相似文献   

14.
The effects of cell transfer on the defective natural defences of beige (bgj/bgj) mice against Strongyloides ratti were studied by assessing recovery of tissue-migrating larvae from head and lung. Transfer of peritoneal resident cells from normal bgj/+ mice restored the defective natural defence of beige mice. The non-adherent population of normal peritoneal cells did not have the restorative capacity. Macrophages may be important to the natural defence against S. ratti.  相似文献   

15.
Strongyloides ratti and Trichinella spiralis: net charge of epicuticle   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The intact epicuticles of Strongyloides ratti stage-3 larvae and Trichinella spiralis stage-1 larvae were found to have a surface net negative charge. Ultrastructural studies on S. ratti using cationized ferritin and ruthenium red showed the negative charge to be dense and uniformly distributed over the epicuticular surface. Staining with acetic acid-ferric oxide hydrosol occurred at pH 1.65 and suggests that amino acid carboxyl groups were not responsible for the negative charge property. Alcian blue staining occurred at pH 0.5 and at a critical electrolyte concentration (CEC) of 0.9 M MgCl2, a property similar to that of highly sulfated mucopolysaccharides such as the proteoglycan keratan sulfate. In contrast, T. spiralis larvae failed to stain with alcian blue below pH 5.0 or at a CEC of 0.1 M, suggesting its negative charge is associated with dissociated amino acid carboxyl groups. Attempts to remove the negative charge-bearing components in the epicuticle of S. ratti by detergents, organic solvents, denaturing agents, proteases, uronidases, neuraminidases, and lipases were unsuccessful. The presence of elastin in the S. ratti larval outer cortical layer was indicated by its vulnerability to elastase and its reaction to aldehyde fuchsin-alcian blue stain. These results show that the epicuticle of S. ratti is not a typical cell membrane, although it appears to have ultrastructural similarities. It is suggested that the association of highly sulfated mucopolysaccharides with the epicuticular surface of free-living nematodes such as S. ratti L3 may reflect a greater need to protect against surface desiccation. It is also postulated that the highly negatively charged surface may have anticomplementary and anticoagulation effects.  相似文献   

16.
Eight days after mother rats were injected with 4000 infective larvae of Strongyloides ratti at different stages of lactation the numbers of adult worms in their intestines were uniformly low (less than 3% of the dose) compared with unmated controls (mean = 25%). Those in their litters varied from 12% on day 5 to a maximum of 47% on day 17 post partum. These data, which do not correlate with lactational performance, imply that parasite movements in lactating rats are controlled by qualitative, not quantitative, consequences of humoral events. The numbers of worms in litters are concluded to be the result of the interaction of dynamic determinants of larval routes in the mother and changes in the suitability of the neonatal gut as an environment for worm development. The timing of events leading to milk-borne infection is defined. Injected larvae were closely synchronized in their movements, which were completed in 36 h. Larvae experimentally diverted into the mother's tissues during her first lactation were not available for the infection of a second litter.  相似文献   

17.
Experiments for analyzing the movement and dispersal of larvae of C. pipiens molestus were made and preliminaly simulation models were constructed. The models were based on two distributions, the distance and direction of movements between 1 minute intervals. The distribution of distance is represented by a unimodal curve, and that of angle by a bimodal one. The results of simulation reasonably depicted the actual process of movements. Nevertheless, the simulated time-dispersal curves overestimated the number of dispersed individuals. This might be due to mutual attraction among the larvae.  相似文献   

18.
To determine the role of interleukin-5 (IL-5) and eosinophils in protection against Strongyloides ratti, mice treated with anti-IL-5 monoclonal antibody (mAb) were infected with S. ratti larvae. Strongyloides ratti egg numbers in faeces (EPG) in mAb treated mice were higher than those in control mice on days 6 and 7 after inoculation. The numbers of migrating worms in mAb treated mice 36 h after inoculation were higher than those observed in control mice. Intestinal worm numbers in mAb treated mice 5 days after inoculation were higher than those in control mice. These results show that eosinophils effectively protected the host against S. ratti infection by mainly the larval stage in primary infections. The involvement of eosinophils in protection against secondary infection was also examined. Before secondary infection, mice were treated with anti-IL-5 mAb and infected with S. ratti. Patent infections were not observed in either mAb treated or control Ab treated mice. The numbers of migrating worms in the head and lungs of mAb treated mice increased to 60% of that in primary infected mice. Intestinal worms were not found in mAb treated mice or in control mice after oral implantation of adult worms. Eosinophils were therefore mainly involved in protection against tissue migrating worms in secondary infections.  相似文献   

19.
The parasitic nematode Strongyloides ratti has a complex life cycle. The progeny of the parasitic females can develop into three distinct morphs, namely directly developing infective third-stage larvae (iL3s), free-living adult males and free-living adult females. We have analysed of the effect of host immune status (an intra-host factor), environmental temperature (an extra-host factor) and their interaction on the proportion of larvae that develop into these three morphs. The results are consistent with the developmental decision of larvae being controlled by at least two discrete developmental switches. One is a sex-determination event that is affected by host immune status and the other is a switch between alternative female morphs that is affected by both host immune status and environmental temperature. These findings clarify the basis of the life cycle of S. ratti and demonstrate how such complex life cycles can result from a combination of simple developmental switches.  相似文献   

20.
Microwaves have not been tested previously for possible application in producing immunogenic preparations of parasites. This study examines the immunizing capacity of microwave-irradiated, infective larvae of Strongyloides ratti in rats. Rats were inoculated subcutaneously with untreated, microwaved, or microwaved and homogenized larvae, or distilled water, and challenged with untreated larvae. Data were collected on egg production and worm number/rat during primary infections and on egg production, worm number/rat, worm size, and eggs in utero/worm following challenge. Our results demonstrated that microwaved, infective larvae (intact or homogenized) of S. ratti were immunogenic for rats, even though they were incapable of reaching the intestine and maturing to adult worms. The immunity elicited by exposure to microwaved larvae was characterized on challenge by a significant reduction in the number of eggs produced/worm, by the formation of perioral plugs, and by reductions in worm numbers and size. These results suggest that microwave radiation may provide a valuable new tool for parasitic vaccine production. In addition, we have demonstrated the occurrence of a feature of the immune response of rats to S. ratti that may have been overlooked previously; i.e., a gut-level response that was elicited by larvae, but manifested against adult worms in the intestine.  相似文献   

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