Abstract
SummaryIn Hymenolepis diminuta the in vitro rate of absorption of glucose/unit dry weight of worm falls with increasing worm age, with increasing worm weight and as the number of worms in an infection is increased. In a 6 mM solution of glucose, a 5 mg (dry weight) worm from a 7 or 8 worm infection absorbed 80 µmoles/g dry weight/5 min whereas a 60 mg worm, also from a 7 or 8 worm infection, absorbed only 35µmoles/g dry weight/5 min. This change in the rate of absorption is, at least partly, thought to be due to changes in the relative surface area: weight ratio during growth of the worm.The kinetic parameter, Kt glucose, increased from 1.1 mM for a 5 mg (dry weight) worm from a 7 or 8 worm infection to 2 mM for a 60 mg worm. This change in the functioning of the glucose transport system may indicate that there are two components of the glucose transport system – or two separate systems – one with a low Kt and one with a high Kt, the ratios of which change during worm growth.The smaller the number of worms in an infection the greater the rate of glucose absorption. Using 8–day–old worms in a 6 mM glucose solution, 1 worm from a single worm infection absorbs 111 μmoles/g dry weight/5 min, 1 worm from a 7 or 8 worm infection absorbs 88 μmoles/g dry weight/5 min and 1 worm from a 45–50 worm infection absorbs 77 μmoles/g dry weight/5min. The significance of this is discussed with reference to the ‘crowding effect’ in tapeworms.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
21 articles.
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