Trypanosoma brucei: Antigenic analysis of bloodstream,vector, and culture stages by the quantitative fluorescent antibody methods |
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Authors: | BM Honigberg Isabel Cunningham Harold A Stanley Kua-Eyre Su-Lin AG Luckins |
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Institution: | 1. Centre for Tropical Veterinary Medicine, University of Edinburgh, Easter Bush, Roslin, Midlothian, Scotland, U.K.;2. Department of Zoology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01002 U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Quantitative direct fluorescent antibody methods were used in antigenic analysis of developmental stages of Trypanosoma brucei brucei strains, most of them having the same variant antigen B, which were derived from a cyclically transmissible stabilate. Antigen-B trypanosomes were used for initiation of cultures in modified Tobie's (Tm) medium and in Glossina morsitans morsitans organ cultures, and for the infective feed of G. m. morsitans. Antisera against antigen-B bloodstream forms and against Tm-grown culture forms were developed in rabbits by inoculations of disrupted organisms mixed (1:1) with complete Freund's adjuvant. The globulin fractions of the antisera were conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate, and processed on Sephadex G-25 and DEAE-cellulose columns. The DEAE fractions with 2.0 and 4.7 or 4.8 molar fluorescein:protein ratios were pooled and concentrated twofold.Examination of 109 flies at 30 or 31 days after the infective feed revealed about 18.3% midgut, about 10.1% proventricular, and about 3.7% salivary-gland infections. A salivary gland suspension from one of the infected flies gave rise to a parasitemia in a mouse, and trypanosomes from the first parasitemia were transferred by two 3-day syringe passages into another mouse. Smears were prepared of trypanosomes (antigens B-164, B-167) from the first parasitemias from these two mice, of intact B-antigen trypanosomes, of culture forms (CT) from Tm medium, and of procyclics (CG) from Glossina cultures as well as of midgut (GM), proventricular (GP), and salivary-gland (GS) forms from tsetse flies. All these forms were fixed by one or more of the three following methods: complete fixation (CoFix) by the formalin-NH4OH-Tween 80 procedure; fixation before affixation to slides (F+); fixation after affixation to slides (F?). The best results with regard to fluorescence intensity and specificity were obtained by using the CoFix technique.Statistical analyses of the fluorescence means of the antigens subjected to direct and inhibition staining gave the following results: (1) CT, CG, GM, and GP forms were antigenically the same. (2) GM and GP trypanosomes from different flies were antigenically indistinguishable. (3) The surface antigen of the variant-B bloodstream trypanosomes was different from these antigens of culture, midgut, and proventricular forms. It differed also from those of metacyclics from two flies and of B-164 and B-167 bloodstream forms. (4) No antigenic differences were found, in preparations fixed by the F? method, between B-164 and B-167 bloodstream trypanosomes and the metacyclics from two flies, one of which served as the source of the salivary-gland trypomastigotes (GS-98) that gave rise to these two bloodstream form antigens. (5) Closer antigenic relationships were noted between B forms and B-164 and B-167 trypanosomes than between B and CT organisms in smears fixed by the F+ technique, but no such differences were discernible in preparations fixed by the F? procedure. |
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Keywords: | bloodstream forms culture forms tsetse fly organ cultures midgut forms proventricular forms metacyclics antigenic analysis quantitative direct fluorescent antibody methods immunology |
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