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Trichinella spiralis: peroxidase activity in isolated cells from the rat intestine
Authors:G A Castro  S A Roy  R D Stockstill
Institution:Program in Physiology, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas 70257 USA
Abstract:An understanding of physiologic events underlying resistance to parasitic worms depends on a knowledge of metabolic interactions between parasites and specific cells at the host-parasite interface. In the case of invasive intestinal parasites this interaction involves contact with epithelial cells and cells of the lamina propria. This investigation deals with the collection of epithelial cells and lamina propria cells from the small intestine of control rats and rats infected with the nematode, Trichinella spiralis, and measurement of peroxidase activity in these cells. Lamina propria cells were isolated by collagenase digestion of everted gut segments previously denuded of epithelium by treatment with hyaluronidase. Mean peroxidase activity in homogenates of lamina propria cells was equivalent to 40 nmoles H2O2 decomposed/min/mg of cell protein from control rats compared to 413 nmoles from infected animals. Epithelial cell peroxidase activity in homogenates of epithelial cells from both control and infected rats was less than 2 nmoles H2O2 decomposed/min/mg cell protein. The degree of contamination of lamina propria cells with epithelial cells was determined by measuring disaccharidase activity in both cell populations. The specific activity of maltase, sucrase, and trehalase in lamina propria cells was between 10 and 17% of that in epithelial cells. This work is a requisite for a study in which the role of intestinal cell peroxidase in resistance to Trichinella will be evaluated.
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