Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-26T18:52:02.408Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The effect of method of infection on the pathway of juvenile Strongyloides ratti in the host

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2009

P. A. G. Wilson*
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh, Department of Zoology, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK
Norma E. Simpson
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh, Department of Zoology, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK
D. S. Seaton
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh, Department of Zoology, West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, UK
*
Author for correspondence.

Abstract

Subcutaneous injection of the larvae is the almost universally adopted means of initiating experimental infections of skin-invading roundworms but, so far, the possibility that this procedure introduses artefacts of one kind or another has not been critically studied. Experiments described in this paper were used to compare the effect of (a) injection and (b) skin application, of a small, precisely counted (‘exact’) dose of larvae. Results with two strains of s. ratti shoewed that the same proportion the dose developed to adults in the intestines of rats irrespective of the method. With the same exact dose technique it has been shown that milk-borne infection of the pups of lactating rats is not an artefact produced by injectcion. Large doses (mean 4000) of larvae of the homogonic strain of s. ratti carrying a radioactive label of 75 Se were tracked in their migration to the mammary gland following injection or skin application at two different sites on the right-hand side of nursing mother rats. The broad conclusion of earlier work in this laboratory using injection. that larvae move by a local route and not a systemic one, was supported by the results. The detailed distribution of the label and of unlabelled worms of the heterogonic strain in families was, however, different for the methods. indicating that subtle variations in pathway can be brought about by the use of injection. If migration involves the Lymphatic system, then the interpretation of immunological experiments in terms of Lymphatic anatomy must take account of such procedural effects. The extent to which these results contribute to theories of migration in Strongyloides ratti is discussed.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1986

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Abadie, S. (1963) The life-cycle of Strongyloides ratti. Journal of Parasitology, 49 241248.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Abe, Y. (1964) [Studies on the intestinal threadworms—Strongyloides—the occurrence of Strongy–loides ratti in the host body] (Abstract). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 13, 317 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Abe, Y., Hattori, Y. & Tanaka, H. (1965a) [Experimental observations on the parasitism of Strongyloides ratti in the case of isolation of the migration route in the host] (Abstract). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 14, 328 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Abe, Y., Tanaka, H., Kagei, N. & Hori, E. (1965b) [Experimental studies of the migration route of Strongyloides ratti] (Abstract). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 14, 367 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Abe, Y., Tanaka, H., Nagano, K. & Izumi, M. (1966). [Histological studies on the larval mogration of Strongyloides ratti in the cephalic portion of the albino rat] (Abstract). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 15, 310 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Dawkins, H. J. S., Grove, D. I., Dunsmore, J. D. & Mitchell, G. F. (1980) Stronglyoides ratti:susceptibility to infection and resistance to reinfection in inbred of mice as assessed by excretion of larvae. International Journal for Parasitology, 10, 125129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawkins, H. J. S., Thomason, H. J. & Grove, D. I. (1982) The occurrence of Strongyloides ratti in the tissue of mice after percutaneous infection. Journal of Helminthology, 56, 4550.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hattori, Y. (1977). [Experimental studies on the migration route of Strongyloides ratti in the rat after subcutaneous inoculation] (Abstract). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 26, (Supplement). 75 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Hattori, Y. (1981). Migration of Strongyloides ratti larvae in rats. Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 30, 597607 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Hattori, Y., Tada, I. & Nagano, K. (1968) [A further study on the migration of Strongyloides ratti in host animals] (Abstract). Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 17, 343 [in Japanese].Google Scholar
Mimori, T., Korenaga, m., Chowdhury, N. & Tada, I. (1982) Growth and morphological changes of Strongloides ratti in rats. Japanese Journal of Parasitology, 31, 361368.Google Scholar
Murrell, K. D. (1980) Strongyloides ratti: Acqured resistance in the rat to preintestinal migrating larvae. Experimental Parasitology, 50, 417425.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murrell, K. D. (1981). Protective role of immunoglobulin G in immunnity to Strongyloides ratti. Journal of Parasitology, 67, 167173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snedecor, G. W. & Cochran, W. G. (1980) Statistical Methods, 7th ed. Iowa State University Press: Ames, Iowa, USA.Google Scholar
Tada, I., Mimori, T. & Nakai, M. (1979) Migration route of Strongyloides ratti in albino rats. Japanese Journal of Parasotology, 28, 219227.Google Scholar
Tilney, N. L. (1971). Patterns of Iymphatic drainage in the adult laboratory rat. Journal of Anatomy, 109, 369383.Google Scholar
Wertheim, G. & Lengy, J. (1965) Growth and developement of Strongyloides ratti Sandground 1925, in the albino rat. Journal of Parasitology, 51, 636639.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, P. A. G. (1977). The effect of the suckling stimulus on the migratoin of Strongyloides ratti in lactating rats. Parasitology, 75, 233239.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilson, P. A. G. (1979) Tracking radioactive larvae of Strongyloides ratti in the host. Parasitology, 79, 2938.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilson, P. A. G. (1983) Roundworm juvenile migration in mammals: the pathways of skinpenetrators reconsidered. In: Aspects of Parasitology—A Festschrift dedicated to the 50th anniversary of the Institute of parasitlogy, McGill University, 1932–1982 (editor Meerovitch, E.): Institute of Parasitology: Montreal, pp. 459485.Google Scholar
Wilson, P. A. G., Cameron, M. & Scott, D. S. (1978a) Patterns of milk transmission of Strongyloides ratti. Parasitology, 77, 8796.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wilson, P. A. G., Cameron, M. & Scott, D. S. (1978b) Stronglyoides ratti in virgin female rats: studies of oestrous cycle effects and general variability. Parasitology, 76, 221227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, P. A. G. & Simpson, N. E. (1981) Dynamics of infection in rats given low doses of homogomic and heterogonic Strongyloides ratti. Parasitology, 83, 459475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, P. A. G. & Simpson, N. E. (1982) Strongyloides ratti: studies of 75Se Labelled laravae of the homogonic strain in femele hosts. Parasitology, 84, 443454.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, P. A. G., Steven, G. E. & Simpson, N. E. (1982) Strongyloides ratti(homogonic): the time-course of early migration in the generalized host deduced from experiments in lactating reas. Parasitology, 85, 533542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar