Milligan John N, Jolly Emmitt R
Department of Biology, Case Western Reserve University.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Aug 16(54):3191. doi: 10.3791/3191.
Schistosome parasites are the causative agents of schistosomiasis, a chronically debilitating disease that affects over 200 million people globally and ranks second to malaria among parasitic diseases in terms of public health and socio-economic impact (1-4). Schistosome parasites are trematode worms with a complex life cycle interchanging between a parasitic life in molluscan and mammalian hosts with intervening free-swimming stages. Briefly, free-swimming cercariae infect a mammalian host by penetrating the skin with the aid of secreted proteases, during which time the cercariae lose their tails, transforming into schistosomules. The schistosomules must now evade the host immune system, develop a gut for digestion of red blood cells, and migrate though the lungs and portal circulation en route to their final destination in the hepatic portal system and eventually the mesenteric veins (for S. mansoni) where male and female worms pair and mate, producing hundreds of eggs daily. Some of the eggs are excreted from the body into fresh water, where the eggs hatch into free-swimming miracidia (5-10). The miracidia infect specific snail species and transform into mother and daughter sporocysts, which in turn, produce infective cercariae, completing the life cycle. Unfortunately, the entire schistosome life cycle cannot be cultured in vitro, but infective cercariae can be transformed into schistosomules, and the schistosomules can be cultured for weeks for the analysis of schistosome development in vitro or microarray analysis. In this protocol, we provide a visual description of cercarial transformation and in vitro culturing of schistosomules. We shed infectious cercariae from the snail host Biomphalaria glabrata and manually transform them into schistosomules by detaching their tails using an emulsifying double-ended needle. The in vitro cercarial transformation and schistosomules culture techniques described avoid the use of a mammalian host, which simplifies visualization of schistosomes and facilitates the collection of the parasite for experimental analysis. in vitro transformation and culturing techniques of schistosomes have been done for years (11, 12), but no visual protocols have been developed that are available to the entire community.
血吸虫寄生虫是血吸虫病的病原体,血吸虫病是一种长期使人衰弱的疾病,全球有超过2亿人受其影响,就公共卫生和社会经济影响而言,在寄生虫病中仅次于疟疾(1-4)。血吸虫寄生虫是吸虫,其生命周期复杂,在软体动物和哺乳动物宿主之间交替寄生,中间有自由游动阶段。简而言之,自由游动的尾蚴借助分泌的蛋白酶穿透皮肤感染哺乳动物宿主,在此过程中尾蚴失去尾巴,转变为童虫。童虫现在必须躲避宿主免疫系统,发育出用于消化红细胞的肠道,并通过肺和门静脉循环迁移,最终到达肝门系统的最终目的地,最终到达肠系膜静脉(对于曼氏血吸虫),在那里雄虫和雌虫配对并交配,每天产数百个卵。一些卵从体内排出到淡水中,在淡水中卵孵化成自由游动的毛蚴(5-10)。毛蚴感染特定的蜗牛种类并转变为母孢蚴和子孢蚴,子孢蚴进而产生感染性尾蚴,完成生命周期。不幸的是,整个血吸虫生命周期无法在体外培养,但感染性尾蚴可以转变为童虫,童虫可以培养数周用于体外血吸虫发育分析或微阵列分析。在本方案中,我们提供了尾蚴转变和童虫体外培养的直观描述。我们从蜗牛宿主光滑双脐螺中获取感染性尾蚴,并使用乳化双头针通过分离其尾巴手动将它们转变为童虫。所描述的体外尾蚴转变和童虫培养技术避免了使用哺乳动物宿主,这简化了血吸虫的可视化,并便于收集寄生虫进行实验分析。血吸虫的体外转变和培养技术已经开展多年(11, 12),但尚未开发出可供整个社区使用的直观方案。