Titanji V P, Mbacham W F, Sakwe A
Biotechnology Centre, University of Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Acta Trop. 1990 Jul;47(5-6):307-21. doi: 10.1016/0001-706x(90)90032-u.
By using radioiodination methods which are thought to label preferentially the surface followed by SDS-PAGE and autoradiography, components of different developmental stages of O. volvulus have been identified. Between 2 and 10 polypeptide antigens were revealed on infective larvae (L3), females, males, eggs, nodular and skin microfilariae by using immunoblotting assays with human onchocerciasis sera. Antigen recognition did not vary with the density of skin microfilariae in the patients from whom the sera were obtained. Some of the antigens seemed to be stage specific; for example, antigens of 31 kDa which were detected only on skin microfilariae, or the 67.5 and 25 kDa components that occurred on the adult females, but were absent from adult males. Some of these antigens were also identified as glycoproteins. A 68 kDa glycoprotein was found in adult females, males and nodular microfilariae. Two glycoproteins of 74 and 45 kDa were found on egg shells, and a 18.5 kDa glycoprotein was recovered from L3. Type VI collagen was found with a specific antiserum on skin microfilariae, but not on eggs and females. Laminin was found on nodular mf. It is concluded that the changing antigenic profiles of the worm stages and the coating of these worms with connective tissue epitopes contribute to the evasion of host immunity.