This study examined the effects of larval trematode infection on the neutral lipid and phospholipid content of Biomphalaria glabrata patently infected with the daughter rediae of Echinostoma caproni. Uninfected snails were used as matched controls. As determined by qualitative high-performance silica gel thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC), the major neutral lipids present in the whole bodies and digestive gland-gonad complexes in both snail populations were free sterols, free fatty acids, and triacylglycerols, and the major polar lipids were phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylethanolamine. Quantitative analysis by HPTLC with visible and UV scanning reflectance densitometry showed no significant differences in the concentrations of these lipids in whole bodies of infected snails vs the controls, but the concentration of triacylglycerols in the infected digestive gland-gonad complex was significantly less than that of the uninfected. No qualitative differences in neutral lipids and phospholipids in shell or plasma samples were found between infected vs uninfected snails.
High performance thin layer chromatography was used to determine neutral lipid profiles in the feces of BALB/c mice infected with adults of Echinostoma caproni (Trematoda). An approximate 25 worm burden per host induced changes in the neutral lipid profile of the mice at 1 to 5 weeks post infection (PI) relative to the uninfected controls. Infection caused a significant decrease (Student's t-test, P , 0.05) in the triacylglycerol fraction at 3 weeks PI and a significant increase (Student's t-test, P , 0.05) in the free sterol fraction at 2 weeks PI relative to the uninfected controls. Neutral lipid profiles of feces may serve as an indicator of infection by intestinal trematodes in animals and humans.
The effect of the age of adult Echinostoma caproni on egg development was studied. The percentage of fully developed miracidia was determined in eggs derived from adult worms obtained from laboratory mice at 2, 4, 6, and 8 wk postinfection (PI). Regardless of the age of worms from which the eggs were obtained, the percentage of fully developed miracidia was always >90%, and 60-80% of the eggs hatched. Several previous studies have shown that eggs derived from 2- to 4-wk-old E. caproni yielded miracidia that infected Biomphalaria glabrata snails. Results of the present study on E. caproni were in marked contrast to previous results with Echinostoma friedi, for which viable eggs were not obtained at 2 and 3 wk PI and maximal infectivity of miracidia in snails was obtained from eggs derived from worms collected at 8 and 9 wk PI. Further studies are needed to determine if the egg viability of other species in the "revolutum" group follow that of E. caproni or E. friedi.
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