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1.
The Drosophila immune system discriminates between different classes of infectious microbes and responds with pathogen-specific defense reactions via the selective activation of the Toll and the immune deficiency (Imd) signaling pathways. The Toll pathway mediates most defenses against Gram-positive bacteria and fungi, whereas the Imd pathway is required to resist Gram-negative bacterial infection. Microbial recognition is achieved through peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs); Gram-positive bacteria activate the Toll pathway through a circulating PGRP (PGRP-SA), and Gram-negative bacteria activate the Imd pathway via PGRP-LC, a putative transmembrane receptor, and PGRP-LE. Gram-negative binding proteins (GNBPs) were originally identified in Bombyx mori for their capacity to bind various microbial compounds. Three GNBPs and two related proteins are encoded in the Drosophila genome, but their function is not known. Using inducible expression of GNBP1 double-stranded RNA, we now demonstrate that GNBP1 is required for Toll activation in response to Gram-positive bacterial infection; GNBP1 double-stranded RNA expression renders flies susceptible to Gram-positive bacterial infection and reduces the induction of the antifungal peptide encoding gene Drosomycin after infection by Gram-positive bacteria but not after fungal infection. This phenotype induced by GNBP1 inactivation is identical to a loss-of-function mutation in PGRP-SA, and our genetic studies suggest that GNBP1 acts upstream of the Toll ligand Sp?tzle. Altogether, our results demonstrate that the detection of Gram-positive bacteria in Drosophila requires two putative pattern recognition receptors, PGRP-SA and GNBP1.  相似文献   

2.
The investigation of the response of Biomphalaria glabrata snails to Echinostoma paraensei (digenea) at 2 days post-exposure by suppression subtractive hybridization yielded a partial sequence of the anti-oxidant enzyme manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD). Full-length MnSOD (669nt) from M line and BS-90 strains of B. glabrata differed by one synonymous nucleotide replacement. B. glabrata has 1-4 MnSOD loci (Southern hybridization). Both snail strains expressed MnSOD at equal baseline levels (quantitative PCR). Susceptible snails increased expression of MnSOD following infection with E. paraensei or Schistosoma mansoni, and expression was reduced in the incompatible combination (BS-90 B. glabrata and S. mansoni). Thus, MnSOD did not determine resistance or susceptibility for these parasites, but expression of MnSOD is consistent with its involvement in a stress response of B. glabrata.  相似文献   

3.
Peptidoglycan is an essential and specific component of the bacterial cell wall and therefore is an ideal recognition signature for the immune system. Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) are conserved from insects to mammals and able to bind PGN (non-catalytic PGRPs) and, in some cases, to efficiently degrade it (catalytic PGRPs). In Drosophila, several non-catalytic PGRPs function as selective peptidoglycan receptors upstream of the Toll and Imd pathways, the two major signalling cascades regulating the systemic production of antimicrobial peptides. Recognition PGRPs specifically activate the Toll pathway in response to Lys-type peptidoglycan found in most Gram-positive bacteria and the Imd pathway in response to DAP-type peptidoglycan encountered in Gram-positive bacilli-type bacteria and in Gram-negative bacteria. Catalytic PGRPs on the other hand can potentially reduce the level of immune activation by scavenging peptidoglycan. In accordance with this, PGRP-LB and PGRP-SC1A/B/2 have been shown to act as negative regulators of the Imd pathway. In this study, we report a biochemical and genetic analysis of PGRP-SB1, a catalytic PGRP. Our data show that PGRP-SB1 is abundantly secreted into the hemolymph following Imd pathway activation in the fat body, and exhibits an enzymatic activity towards DAP-type polymeric peptidoglycan. We have generated a PGRP-SB1/2 null mutant by homologous recombination, but its thorough phenotypic analysis did not reveal any immune function, suggesting a subtle role or redundancy of PGRP-SB1/2 with other molecules. Possible immune functions of PGRP-SB1 are discussed.  相似文献   

4.
The immune deficiency (Imd) signaling pathway is activated by Gram‐negative bacteria for producing antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). In Drosophila melanogaster, the activation of this pathway is initiated by the recognition of Gram‐negative bacteria by peptidoglycan (PGN) recognition proteins (PGRPs), PGRP‐LC and PGRP‐LE. In this study, we found that the Imd pathway is involved in enhancing the promoter activity of AMP gene in response to Gram‐negative bacteria or diaminopimelic (DAP) type PGNs derived from Gram‐negative bacteria in an immune responsive silkworm cell line, Bm‐NIAS‐aff3. Using gene knockdown experiments, we further demonstrated that silkworm PGRP L6 (BmPGRP‐L6) is involved in the activation of E. coli or E. coli‐PGN mediated AMP promoter activation. Domain analysis revealed that BmPGRP‐L6 contained a conserved PGRP domain, transmembrane domain, and RIP homotypic interaction motif like motif but lacked signal peptide sequences. BmPGRP‐L6 overexpression enhances AMP promoter activity through the Imd pathway. BmPGRP‐L6 binds to DAP‐type PGNs, although it also binds to lysine‐type PGNs that activate another immune signal pathway, the Toll pathway in Drosophila. These results indicate that BmPGRP‐L6 is a key PGRP for activating the Imd pathway in immune responsive silkworm cells.  相似文献   

5.
Innate immune recognition of microbes is a complex process that can be influenced by both the host and the microbe. Drosophila uses two distinct immune signaling pathways, the Toll and immune deficiency (Imd) pathways, to respond to different classes of microbes. The Toll pathway is predominantly activated by Gram-positive bacteria and fungi, while the Imd pathway is primarily activated by Gram-negative bacteria. Recent work has suggested that this differential activation is achieved through peptidoglycan recognition protein (PGRP)-mediated recognition of specific forms of peptidoglycan (PG). In this study, we have further analyzed the specific PG molecular requirements for Imd activation through the pattern recognition receptor PGRP-LC in both cultured cell line and in flies. We found that two signatures of Gram-negative PG, the presence of diaminopimelic acid in the peptide bridge and a 1,6-anhydro form of N-acetylmuramic acid in the glycan chain, allow discrimination between Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Our results also point to a role for PG oligomerization in Imd activation, and we demonstrate that elements of both the sugar backbone and the peptide bridge of PG are required for optimum recognition. Altogether, these results indicate multiple requirements for efficient PG-mediated activation of the Imd pathway and demonstrate that PG is a complex immune elicitor.  相似文献   

6.
The hemolymph of invertebrates often contains molecules that agglutinate vertebrate erythrocytes and that may function as humoral mediators of "non-self" recognition. The objectives of this study were to 1) determine if exposure of M line or 10-R2 strain Biomphalaria glabrata snails to infection with the trematodes Echinostoma paraensei and Schistosoma mansoni could increase agglutinating activity in snail hemolymph, and 2) identify particular hemolymph molecules with such activity. In some host-parasite combinations, such as juvenile M line snails and E. paraensei, infection provoked significant elevations in titer from as early as 2 days postinfection (dpi) through 15 dpi. In other combinations, as with 10-R2 snails and E. paraensei or S. mansoni, host responses were comparatively modest, yet still measurable. In general, E. paraensei and S. mansoni elicited different responses from the same host strain, and M line and 10-R2 snails responded differently to the same parasite. Further study of the response of juvenile M line snails to E. paraensei indicated that hemolymph agglutinating activity could be inhibited by several monosaccharides (including L-fucose) and by EDTA and EGTA. An affinity column containing L-fucose agarose beads was used to purify molecules with agglutinating activity from the hemolymph of such snails. The fraction eluted from the column by 0.2 M L-fucose was shown by SDS-PAGE to contain a broad band of 80-120 kD and, less consistently, a 200 kD band. Following extensive dialysis to remove L-fucose, this fraction had agglutinating activity. As a previous study has shown that the hemolymph of E. paraensei-infected snails contains significantly increased quantities of 80-120 kD polypeptides, it is concluded that polypeptides in this size range are responsible, at least in part, for the increased hemolymph agglutination activity in such snails.  相似文献   

7.
M line Biomphalaria glabrata snails of 4-, 6-, 8-, 10-, 12-, or 20-mm shell diameter were individually exposed to 10 miracidia each of Echinostoma paraensei. Snails 10 mm in size or larger were found to be significantly less likely to harbor intraventricular sporocysts than snails in smaller size categories. The percentage of snails with intraventricular sporocysts that also developed hemocyte encapsulation responses generally increased with snail size, whereas the number of snails that ultimately became heavily parasitized with large numbers of daughter rediae decreased significantly with snail size. However, at least some snails in each size category developed such disseminated infections. Comparative histological study of 6- and 12-mm snails revealed that parasites readily penetrated both groups of snails, but were more likely to be encapsulated and destroyed in larger snails. Encapsulation reactions were noted from 1 to 15 days postexposure (dpe) in 12-mm snails, indicating that unlike other commonly studied models of trematode-gastropod interactions, snail resistance is not always manifested during the first few days following exposure. Upon infection with E. paraensei, both 6- and 12-mm snails showed significant increases in the number of circulating hemocytes/mm3 of hemolymph. In 6-mm snails, such increases occurred concurrently with successful parasite development. Hemocyte counts in 6-mm snails were significantly elevated from 4 to 15 dpe whereas in 12-mm snails they were significantly elevated from 2 to 30 dpe. A significant degree of resistance to E. paraensei develops as B. glabrata grows and attains sexual maturity. A mechanistic understanding of this phenomenon awaits further investigation.  相似文献   

8.
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) are innate immunity molecules conserved from insects to mammals. Insects have up to 19 PGRPs, which activate Toll or Imd signal transduction pathways or induce proteolytic cascades that generate antimicrobial products, induce phagocytosis, hydrolyse peptidoglycan, and protect insects against infections. Mammals have four PGRPs, which were hypothesized to function as signal-transducing pattern recognition receptors. However, all mammalian PGRPs are secreted, usually as disulphide-linked homo- and heterodimers. One mammalian PGRP, PGLYRP-2, is an N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase that hydrolyses bacterial peptidoglycan and reduces its proinflammatory activity. PGLYRP-2 is secreted from liver into blood, and is also induced by bacteria in epithelial cells. The three remaining mammalian PGRPs are bactericidal or bacteriostatic proteins. PGLYRP-1 is expressed primarily in the granules of polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNs) , and PGLYRP-3 and PGLYRP-4 are expressed in the skin, eyes, salivary glands, throat, tongue, esophagus, stomach and intestine, and protect the host against infections. They kill bacteria by interacting with their cell wall peptidoglycan, rather than permeabilizing their membranes. These PGRPs therefore are a new class of bactericidal and bacteriostatic proteins that have different structure, mechanism of action, and expression pattern from currently known vertebrate antimicrobial peptides. Direct bactericidal activity of these PGRPs either evolved in vertebrates or mammals, or it is yet to be discovered in insects.  相似文献   

9.
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) are pattern recognition receptors that specifically bind to peptidoglycans, a major component of bacterial cell wall. Generally, PGRPs are responsible for recognition of bacterial invasion in invertebrates. Full length cDNAs of PGRP, designated as CgPGRP-S1S, -S1L, -S2 and -S3, were identified from the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas. Homology and domain searches classified these CgPGRPs as short-type PGRPs for extracellular PGN recognition. Amidase activity was predicted in all CgPGRPs, and defensin-like domains were found in CgPGRP-S1S and -S1L, suggesting that they may also function as antimicrobial proteins. Although phylogenetic analysis indicated that CgPGRPs are closely related to each other, they showed different tissue expression patterns; CgPGRP-S1S in the mantle and the gill, -S1L in the mantle, -S2 in the hemocytes and -S3 in the digestive diverticula. The CgPGRPs seem to survey bacterial invasion in their corresponding expression tissues. This is the first report of the possibility that bivalve mollusks have PGN recognition systems as suggested by the identification of multiple PGRPs distributed in various tissues.  相似文献   

10.
Earlier in vivo work by Lie et al. (1977) indicated that the innate resistance of the 10R2 strain of Biomphalaria glabrata to PR1 Schistosoma mansoni could be interfered with if the snails were infected previously with another trematode, Echinostoma paraensei. We have studied this interference phenomenon using in vitro methods in an attempt to understand its mechanistic basis. Hemolymph, derived from 10R2 snails infected with E. paraensei for 14-28 days, killed 25% of S. mansoni sporocysts in vitro, significantly less (P less than 0.001) than the 90% killing rate observed with hemolymph from uninfected, control 10R2 snails. Hemolymph from the infected 10R2 snails and from schistosome susceptible M line snails did not differ significantly (P greater than 0.1) in their relative inability to kill S. mansoni sporocysts in vitro. The defect in sporocyst killing exhibited by echinostome infected 10R2 snails was traced to the cellular, rather than the humoral, component of the hemolymph. Preparations containing uninfected 10R2 snail hemolymph and echinostome daughter rediae exhibited significantly less (P less than 0.001) killing of S. mansoni sporocysts than did controls containing only 10R2 hemolymph and S. mansoni sporocysts. Our results suggest that echinostome larvae release factors that interfere with the ability of B. glabrata hemocytes to kill S. mansoni sporocysts.  相似文献   

11.
Although Schistosoma mansoni occurs mainly in the tropics, where intense levels of solar radiation are present, the impact of ultraviolet (UV) light on schistosome transmission is not known. The purpose of this study was to investigate potential effects of UVB (290-320nm) on juvenile Biomphalaria glabrata, the snail intermediate host of S. mansoni. Albino and wild-type snails were exposed to doses of UVB from UV-fluorescent lamps, and the following were measured: survival, photoreactivation (light-mediated DNA repair), effects on feeding behavior, and morphological tissue abnormalities. Irradiation with UVB is lethal to B. glabrata in a dose-dependent manner. Exposure to white light subsequent to UVB irradiation enhances survival, probably by photoreactivation. The shell offers some, but not complete, protection. Experiments in which UVB transmittance through the shell was blocked with black nail polish suggest that injury to both exposed (headfoot) and shell-enclosed (mantle and visceral mass) tissues contributes to mortality in lethally irradiated snails. Wild-type (pigmented) snails are less susceptible to lethal effects of UVB than albino snails, and they may be more capable of photoreactivation. UVB exposure inhibits snail feeding behavior, and causes tentacle forks and growths on the headfoot. Thus, UVB may influence the life cycle of S. mansoni by both lethal and sub-lethal damage to the snail intermediate host. However, the ability of snails to photoreactivate may mitigate these effects.  相似文献   

12.
The peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) are innate immunity molecules present in insects, mollusks, echinoderms, and vertebrates, but not in nematodes or plants. PGRPs have at least one carboxy-terminal PGRP domain (approximately 165 amino acids long), which is homologous to bacteriophage and bacterial type 2 amidases. Insects have up to 19 PGRPs, classified into short (S) and long (L) forms. The short forms are present in the hemolymph, cuticle, and fat-body cells, and sometimes in epidermal cells in the gut and hemocytes, whereas the long forms are mainly expressed in hemocytes. The expression of insect PGRPs is often upregulated by exposure to bacteria. Insect PGRPs activate the Toll or immune deficiency (Imd) signal transduction pathways or induce proteolytic cascades that generate antimicrobial products, induce phagocytosis, hydrolyze peptidoglycan, and protect insects against infections. Mammals have four PGRPs, which are secreted; it is not clear whether any are directly orthologous to the insect PGRPs. One mammalian PGRP, PGLYRP-2, is an N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine amidase that hydrolyzes bacterial peptidoglycan and reduces its proinflammatory activity; PGLYRP-2 is secreted from the liver into the blood and is also induced by bacteria in epithelial cells. The three remaining mammalian PGRPs are bactericidal proteins that are secreted as disulfide-linked homo- and hetero-dimers. PGLYRP-1 is expressed primarily in polymorphonuclear leukocyte granules and PGLYRP-3 and PGLYRP-4 are expressed in the skin, eyes, salivary glands, throat, tongue, esophagus, stomach, and intestine. These three proteins kill bacteria by interacting with cell wall peptidoglycan, rather than permeabilizing bacterial membranes as other antibacterial peptides do. Direct bactericidal activity of these PGRPs either evolved in the vertebrate (or mammalian) lineage or is yet to be discovered in insects.  相似文献   

13.
《Journal of Asia》2022,25(4):102003
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) discriminate and bind peptidoglycans by acting as pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) in insects, and function pivotal roles in innate immune response. In the present study, we cloned a full-length PGRP gene designed as OfPGRP8 from the Asian corn borer, Ostrinia furnacalis (Guenée). Its mRNA exhibited the highest abundance in fat body, and its expression level upregulated dramatically after bacterial challenges. Purified recombinant OfPGRP8 exhibited intensive binding capacity to peptidoglycans from Staphylococcus aureus and Micrococcus luteus. Additionally, recombinant OfPGRP8 could inhibit the growth of S. aureus, M. luteus. However, recombinant OfPGRP8 could not cause agglutination of S. aureus, M. luteus or Escherichia coli. Furthermore, we also demonstrated that OfPGRP8 may be involved in modulating the signaling pathway of antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) synthesis. In sum, our results provided evidence that OfPGRP8 discriminates peptidoglycans from microbes and acts as a PRR to initiate downstream immune signaling pathways.  相似文献   

14.
Zhang SM  Zeng Y  Loker ES 《Innate immunity》2008,14(3):175-189
A growing body of evidence suggests an important role for fibrinogen-like proteins in innate immunity in both vertebrates and invertebrates. It has been shown that fibrinogen-related proteins (FREPs), plasma proteins present in the freshwater snail Biomphalaria glabrata, the intermediate host for the human blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni, are diverse and involved in snail innate defense responses. To gain further insight into the functions of FREPs, recombinant FREP proteins (rFREPs) were produced in Escherichia coli and antibodies (Abs) were raised against the corresponding rFREPs. We first show that most FREP proteins exist in their native conformation in snail hemolymph as multimeric proteins. Western blot analyses reveal that expression of multiple FREPs including FREP4 in plasma from M line and BS-90 snails, which are susceptible and resistant to S. mansoni infection, respectively, is up-regulated significantly after infection with the trematode Echinostoma paraensei. Moreover, our assays demonstrate that FREPs are able to bind E. paraensei sporocysts and their secretory/excretory products (SEPs), and a variety of microbes (Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria and yeast). Furthermore, this binding capability shows evidence of specificity with respect to pathogen type; for example, 65-75-kDa FREPs (mainly FREP4) bind to E. paraensei sporocysts and their SEPs whereas 95-kDa and 125-kDa FREPs bind the microbes assayed. Our results suggest that FREPs can recognize a wide range of pathogens, from prokaryotes to eukaryotes, and different categories of FREPs seem to exhibit functional specialization with respect to the pathogen encountered.  相似文献   

15.
昆虫肽聚糖识别蛋白研究进展   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
陈康康  吕志强 《昆虫学报》2014,57(8):969-978
在脊椎动物和非脊椎动物中,识别非己是天生免疫反应中的第一步。肽聚糖是细菌细胞壁的必需成分,属于进化上保守的微生物表面病原相关分子模式(pathogen-associated molecular pattern, PAMP),可以被模式识别蛋白(pattern recognition proteins, PRRs)如肽聚糖识别蛋白(peptidoglycan recognition proteins, PGRPs)识别。 在昆虫的天生免疫系统中,有些PGRPs能够利用细菌独有的肽聚糖识别入侵细菌,并将细菌入侵信号传递给下游的抗菌肽(antimicrobial peptide, AMP)合成途径,启动抗菌肽基因的转录及合成;PGRPs对肽聚糖的识别也会启动酚氧化酶原途径的激活,引起黑化反应。有些具有酰胺酶活性的PGRPs可以促进吞噬作用;有些可以抑制抗菌肽合成以减弱过度免疫反应带来的损伤。还有一些PGRPs作为效应因子直接作用于细菌将细菌杀死。本文主要从昆虫PGRPs作为识别受体(recognition receptor)、调节子(regulator)和效应因子(effector) 3个方面进行了综述,并分析了目前PGRPs研究中仍不清楚的问题和未来研究的方向。  相似文献   

16.
As carbohydrates on the surfaces of sporocysts of digenetic trematodes may be targets of attack by the molluscan internal defense system, the lectin-binding patterns of living, in vitro-transformed sporocysts of Schistosoma mansoni and Echinostoma paraensei were characterized. Schistosoma mansoni sporocysts specifically bound 8 and E. paraensei 6 of 11 lectins examined. Sporocysts of the 2 species responded differently to 7 of the 11 lectins. Lectins inhibitable by mannose, galactose, and N-acetylgalactosamine were bound by both species. Lectins inhibited by fucose and N-acetylglucosamine bound uniquely to S. mansoni, and an N-acetylneuraminic acid (NeuNAc)-inhibitable lectin bound only to E. paraensei. Preincubation of sporocysts of either species in the plasma of the host snail Biomphalaria glabrata for as long as 24 hr only marginally altered the subsequent binding of lectins. Pretreatment of S. mansoni sporocysts with pronase E and trypsin substantially altered subsequent lectin binding, but similar treatment of E. paraensei sporocysts had little effect. A neuraminidase enzyme derived from Clostridium perfringens diminished binding of the NeuNAc-inhibitable lectin to E. paraensei sporocysts. This study indicates that lectin-binding monosaccharides are expressed abundantly on sporocyst surfaces, they vary considerably between 2 species parasitizing the same host, and they are not obscured readily or altered by exposure to host plasma.  相似文献   

17.
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) are non-specific immune molecules of insects, and vertebrates etc., but are not present in plants and nematodes. In the current experiment, a PGRP DNA sequence (2,910 bp containing four exons) was identified from genomic DNA library of Asian corn borer, Ostrinia furnacalis, and a full-length cDNA programming PGRP was cloned (designed as OfPGRP-S) with an open reading frame of 579 bp, having 192 amino acid. This inferred amino acid sequence showed maximum similarity to known lepidopteran PGRPs. Quantitative real-time PCR investigation disclosed the level of mRNA of OfPGRP-S to be constitutively expressed in the whole developmental stages and with higher expression in the mature larvae. Even more the OfPGRP-S was mainly expressed in immune capable organs i.e., fat body and midgut, and was strongly induced by injecting gram-positive bacteria i.e., Staphylococus aureus. Recombinant protein OfPGRP-S could bind to S. aureus and Bacillus thuringiensis which enhance proPO activation in the presence of these microbes. The results indicated that OfPGRP-S is an inducible protein acting as a receptor-type PGRP for enhancing the proPO activation on exposure to bacteria.  相似文献   

18.
Peptidoglycan recognition proteins (PGRPs) play crucial role in innate immunity for both invertebrates and vertebrates, owing to their prominent ability in detecting and eliminating invading bacteria. In the present study, two short PGRPs from mollusk Solen grandis (designated as SgPGRP-S1 and SgPGRP-S2) were identified, and their expression patterns, both in tissues and toward three PAMPs stimulation, were then characterized. The full-length cDNA of SgPGRP-S1 and SgPGRP-S2 was 1672 and 1285 bp, containing an open reading frame (ORF) of 813 and 426 bp, respectively, and deduced amino acid sequences showed high similarity to other members of PGRP superfamily. Both SgPGRP-S1 and SgPGRP-S2 encoded a PGRP domain. The motif of Zn2+ binding sites and amidase catalytic sites were well conserved in SgPGRP-S1, but partially conserved in SgPGRP-S2. The two PGRPs exhibited different tissue expression pattern. SgPGRP-S1 was highly expressed in muscle and hepatopancreas, while SgPGRP-S2 was highly in gill and mantle. The mRNA expression of SgPGRP-S1 could be induced acutely by stimulation of PGN, and also moderately by β-1,3-glucan, but not by LPS, while expression of SgPGRP-S2 was significantly up-regulated (P < 0.01) when S. grandis was stimulated by all the three PAMPs, though the expression levels were relatively lower than SgPGRP-S1. Our results suggested SgPGRP-S1 and SgPGRP-S2 could serve as pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) involved in the immune recognition of S. grandis, and they might perform different functions in the immune defense against invaders.  相似文献   

19.
Hemocytes derived from a strain (13-16-R1) of Biomphalaria glabrata resistant to Schistosoma mansoni were significantly more likely to bind untreated latex beads than hemocytes from the schistosome-susceptible M line strain. Beads preincubated in 13-16-R1 plasma were more readily bound by both 13-16-R1 and M line hemocytes than beads preincubated in M line plasma. Beads preincubated in plasma derived from snails of either strain infected with the trematode Echinostoma paraensei were more readily bound by hemocytes than beads preincubated in plasma from control snails of the corresponding strain. Plasma from snails exposed to S. mansoni did not have a similar effect. Throughout these experiments, beads receiving a particular treatment were consistently bound at higher rates by 13-16-R1 than M line hemocytes. SDS-PAGE of plasma components eluted from beads revealed differences between treatments, particularly in diffuse bands falling into two groups, of 75-130 and 150-220 kDa. The results indicate that both hemocytes and plasma components from the two host strains differ and identify plasma molecules deserving of additional study as possible modulators of hemocyte effector functions. Also, S. mansoni and E. paraensei provoked different responses in the same host snail.  相似文献   

20.
The daily evolution of the number of hemocytes in Biomphalaria glabrata was ascertained under three conditions: uninfected snails, snails infected with Schistosoma mansoni, and snails infected with Echinostoma liei. The Results show differences between the three experiments as well as in the average hemocyte density over the whole experimental period, as in the temporal dynamics of circulating hemocyte number. Specifically, it appears that the development of E. liei in B. glabrata induces a density of circulating hemocytes greater than that in uninfected B. glabrata or in snails infected with S. mansoni. The hemocyte dynamics observed in both experimental groups might best be interpreted by taking into account differences in the immunogenic stimulating capacity of the two trematodes and different physiological functions of the hemocytes brought into play during the infection: wound repair, nutrient digestion and transport, and excretion.  相似文献   

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