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Schistosoma mansoni: development of the cercarial glycocalyx
Authors:J P Caulfield  H C Yuan  C M Cianci  A Hein
Institution:Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
Abstract:The development of the cercarial glycocalyx of Schistosoma mansoni was studied by transmission electron microscopy and immunofluorescence light microscopy employing antibodies raised against extracted and chromatographed glycocalyx. By electron microscopy, cercariae present in the brood chamber of daughter sporocysts were surrounded by an electron-dense granular and fibrillar matrix. This material appeared structurally distinct from the glycocalyx which was coarsely fibrillar and located only on the surface of organisms that had developed a final tegument. The thickness of the glycocalyx apparently increased with the maturation of the tegument, since teguments that had many spines also had the thickest glycocalyx. Immunofluorescent staining of frozen sections of infected snail hepatopancreas showed that glycocalyx antigens were present on the surface of the cercariae and not in the matrix within the brood chamber or in snail tissues. Immunofluorescent staining of isolated larval cercariae showed staining of some but not all parasites with partially elongated tails. These studies suggest that the glycocalyx develops late in cercarial development (late in Stage 6 or in Stage 7 of Cheng and Bier), is made by the cercariae themselves, and is not a product of either the sporocyst wall cells or snail hepatopancreas.
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