Schistosoma mansoni: Electrophoretic characterization of strains selected for different levels of infectivity to snails |
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Authors: | Madeleine Fletcher Philip T. LoVerde Charles S. Richards |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana 47907, U.S.A.;Biomedical Research Institute, Rockville, Maryland 20852, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | Individual adult Schistosoma mansoni from strains selected for high or low infectivity to specific strains of the snail intermediate host, Biomphalaria glabrata, were subjected to enzyme electrophoresis on starch gels. Fourteen enzyme systems were analyzed in an attempt to find electrophoretic markers associated with genes for infectivity to snails. The S. mansoni strains were selected from different isolates from Puerto Rico in several strains of B. glabrata. Of an estimated 18 loci, 3 were polymorphic and the remainder monomorphic. For 1 of the 3 polymorphic enzyme loci, lactate dehydrogenase (Ldh, EC 1.1.1.27), phenotype frequencies were correlated with infectivity to snails. In schistosome strains of low infectivity, frequencies of the Ldh-N phenotype ranged between 0.56 and 0.69, while in strains of high infectivity, Ldh-N frequencies were typically 0.91 to 1.00. Whether the correlation is accidental or due to some form of association, such as chromosomal linkage, between the locus responsible for variation in lactate dehydrogenase and a gene for infectivity to snails remains to be determined. |
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Keywords: | Trematode Blood fluke Enzyme electrophoresis Lactate dehydrogenase (EC 1.1.1.27) Chromosomal linkage Genetics Differentiation, intraspecific Infectivity snail NAD 1 g/100 ml distilled water solution of β-diphosphopyridine nucleotide NADP 1 g/100 ml distilled water solution of triphosphopyridine nucleotide NBT 1 g/100 ml distilled water solution of nitroblue tetrazolium MTT 1 g/100 ml distilled water solution of MTT tetrazolium bromide PMS 1 g/100 ml distilled water solution of phenazine methosulfate G6PD For reprints: Department of Microbiology, SUNY, 203 Sherman Hall, Buffalo, N.Y. 14214, U.S.A.. |
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