Schistosoma mansoni: Long-term maintenance of clones by microsurgical transplantation of sporocysts |
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Authors: | LM Cohen LK Eveland |
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Institution: | Department of Microbiology and Immunology, State University of New York at Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, New York 11203, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Schistosoma mansoni sporocysts originally derived from monomiracidially infected Biomphalaria glabrata snails were serially transplanted into the cephalopedal sinus of anesthetized snails by the microsurgical implantation of fragments of parasitized hepato-pancreas and ovotestis. Three to six passages each of five male and five female clones were maintained for as long as 2.0 years. Of the recipient snails which survived surgery, 87% released cercariae, usually beginning 5–7 weeks after surgery. The percentage of snails which released cercariae increased with successive passages. The mean survival time of surgically infected snails after cercarial emergence began was 9.2 ± 0.5 weeks, nearly the same as that of miracidially infected snails. Longevities of snails infected with male or female clones were similar. Recipient snail size and age did not influence cloning success. Beginning 5 weeks from the onset of cercarial emergence large numbers of cercariae (a mean of 3900/snail from male clones and 1300/snail from females) were obtained during each shedding period. These results clearly demonstrate that the microsurgical transplantation of sporocysts is a practical means of maintaining and expanding populations of genetically homogeneous schistosomes (clones). |
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Keywords: | Trematode digenetic Snail Cercaria Sporocyst Cloning Microsurgical transplantation Cercarial production Maintenance Life cycle |
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