Author:
MAJOR M.,WEBB T. J.,HURD H.
Abstract
Infection with developing metacestodes of the rat tapeworm,
Hymenolepis diminuta, is known to retard the accumulation
of the yolk protein, vitellin, in the terminal ovarian follicles of the
intermediate
host, Tenebrio molitor. It is probable that
this is the result of competitive inhibition of juvenile hormone binding
at a
microsomal binding site in the beetle follicular
epithelium. Experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that inhibitor
molecules were circulating in the haemolymph
of infected beetles. Whole haemolymph, collected from male or female beetles
at various stages post-infection, was injected
into non-infected female recipients 2 days post-emergence. Ovaries were
removed
3 days later and the vitellin content
of the same sized follicles measured using an ELISA. The vitellin content
of
follicles from recipients of haemolymph
from females infected with metacestodes at stage 1 and stage 3–4
was
significantly reduced (24 and 27·9%) compared
to sham-infected females. However, haemolymph from females infected with
mature
metacestodes did not affect the
vitellin content. Results were thus comparable to those obtained by monitoring
ovarian vitellin levels in female T. molitor
with bona fide infections. Haemolymph from infected males did
not affect
ovarian vitellin content. These results indicate
that molecules that can modulate vitellogenesis may be present in the haemolymph
of females infected with developing
metacestodes but that these factors disappear later in infection.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
10 articles.
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