Trypanosoma brucei: loss of variable antigens during transformation from bloodstream to procyclic forms in vitro. |
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Authors: | J D Barry K Vickerman |
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Institution: | Zoology Department, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, Scotland, U.K. |
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Abstract: | The loss of variable antigen from Trypansoma brucei during transformation from the bloodstream to the procyclic form in vitro has been monitored by agglutination and immunofluorescence reactions using antisera against both forms. Maximum agglutination of transforming trypanosomes with anti-culture form sera was obtained in 36–48 hr coinciding with loss of the surface coat as seen by electron microscopy. Agglutination with antisera against homologous bloodstream forms, however, reached a constant minimum but still positive level after 7–9 days: absorption of such antisera with culture or heterologous bloodstream forms reduced this period of persistent agglutinability to 72–84 hr, suggesting that the sera contained antibodies to “common” (surface membrane) antigens which became exposed when the surface coat was lost during transformation. The indirect immunofluorescence reaction provided a direct correlation of loss of antigen with loss of coat. The majority of trypanosomes lost detectable variable antigen by 36–48 hr, but a few flagellates, morphologically resembling bloodstream forms, retained the coat and capacity for labeling up to 84 hr; the numbers of such persistent bloodstream forms were shown to be sufficient to give a positive agglutination reaction for the population as a whole up to this time. Variable antigen appeared to be lost by dilution over the entire trypanosome surface rather than in patches or caps and the relevance of this observation to the process of antigenic variation is discussed. |
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Keywords: | Protozoa parasitic Surface coat Antigen variable Culture forms Bloodstream forms Agglutination Immunofluorescence |
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