SUMMARYThe caecal mucosa of wild young and adult grouse infected naturally with Trichostrongylus tenuis was examined by means of scanning electron microscopy and compared with adult grouse which had been treated with an anthelmintic. The caecal mucosa of young red grouse with low worm burdens possessed longitudinal plicae and exhibited little damage. The caeca from adult grouse, most of which carried high worm burdens, showed a localized depression of plicae and atrophy and cell disruption in areas of nematode aggregation. Caeca from adult birds treated with an anthelmintic showed a similar caecal structure to lightly infected caeca from young birds. It is concluded that the normal functioning of the caeca is probably affected by heavy infections of T. tenuis.
Monoclonal antibodies raised against antigens present in the excretions/secretions (E/S) of larval Trichinella spiralis, polyclonal antibodies raised against E/S and antisera from rabbits and pigs infected with T. spiralis were used in conjunction with immunocytochemical techniques to detect antigens in sections of muscle from mice that had been infected with T. spiralis for 15 or 30 days. The antibodies recognized epitopes in the stichocytes, on the surface of the cuticle, in the lumen of the oesophagus and in the lumen of the intestine of encysted larvae. Monoclonal antibodies 7C2C5 and 1H7 and the polyclonal antibodies recognized epitopes in the cavity occupied by the larva, in the cytoplasm of the nurse cell, and in the hypertrophic nuclei of the nurse cell, but did not recognize material in the smaller nuclei of the nurse cell, in the cyst wall or in the surrounding muscle. Monoclonals 3B2E6 and 1D11G8B2, which recognized epitopes in the stichocytes and on the surface of the cuticle of the larvae, gave negative results with the cytoplasm and nuclei of the nurse cell. A polyclonal antibody raised against Trichuris suis recognized epitopes in the muscle and hypodermis of encysted T. spiralis but gave negative results with material in the nurse cell and nurse cell nuclei. The possibility that the antigen detected in the cytoplasm and nuclei of the nurse cell is produced by the stichocytes of the nematode and that it is controlling genes of the altered muscle fibre, either directly or indirectly, is discussed.
Excretory/secretory (ES) products obtained by in vitro culture of infective-stage larvae of Trichinella spiralis and T. pseudospiralis were injected intramuscularly at various intervals into mice. Mini-osmotic pumps containing T. spiralis ES products were also implanted subcutaneously and intraperitoneally into rats. The introduction of ES materials into muscles elicited extensive lesions which included dissolution of myofibres, mobilization of mononuclear and polymorphonuclear leucocytes, angiogenesis, hypertrophy of myonuclei, myotube formation, mitosis, muscle bundles becoming rounded and separated from each other, disappearance of Z, I and A bands of sarcomeres, increase in endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi complexes, decrease in glycogen and relocation of mitochondria. These are considered as degenerative/regenerative changes of muscles to injury. Immunodominant epitopes of specific 45-53 kDa glycoproteins in ES antigens of T. spiralis could not be detected in hypertrophic nuclei of injected muscles by using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies and immunocytochemical methods. ES products of T. spiralis failed to stimulate unsensitized lymphocytes in the lymphocyte transformation test. Infective-stage larvae of T. spiralis released from muscles were found capable of forming nurse cells after injection subcutaneously into rats. It is postulated that the invasion of muscles by trichinellids elicits two independent events, i.e. a general degenerative/regenerative response of muscles and a specific change in genomic expression of myonuclei. The two events are probably mediated by different effector molecules.
The 50-30 kDa fraction isolated from the excretory/secretory products (E/S) of the nematode Nippostrongylus brasiliensis significantly decreased the amplitude of contraction of segments of uninfected rat intestine when injected into the lumen of the segments maintained in an organ bath. Dot blot analysis of the fraction suggested that it was similar in immunoreactivity to porcine vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP). When antiserum to porcine VIP was mixed with N. brasiliensis E/S and the mixtures were injected into the lumen of segments of rat intestine, the inhibitory effect of the E/S on amplitude of contraction decreased. When physiological concentrations of porcine VIP (12.9 pmol/ml) were injected into the lumen of segments of uninfected rat intestine the amplitude of contraction decreased significantly. Western blot analysis of the E/S, using antiserum to porcine VIP, recognized a 30 kDa protein in the E/S and also in whole worm homogenate suggesting that synthesis of the peptide occurs inside the nematode. Peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI)-like immunoreactivity was detected in a 68 kDa fraction of the E/S and the homogenate but this fraction did not affect the amplitude of contractions of the intestine.
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