Dwinell M B, Bass P, Oaks J A
Department of Comparative Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.
J Parasitol. 1998 Aug;84(4):673-80.
Infection of rats with the enteric, lumen-dwelling tapeworm Hymenolepis diminuta causes electric changes in host intestinal smooth muscle and decreased luminal transit. The mechanisms that stimulate host intestinal alterations during this nontissue invasive infection may include the tapeworm's biomass, its diurnal migratory behavior, a host immune-mediated response, or direct parasite stimulation of host motor activity. In vivo intestinal myoelectric activity was monitored to evaluate the following: (1) that reinfection with H. diminuta is influenced by host immune regulation and (2) that administration of tapeworm fractions to never-before-infected rats initiates an alteration of enteric smooth muscle activity. To address the first hypothesis, we determined that altered intestinal myoelectric activity patterns were no different and did not occur earlier in a second infection with H. diminuta than in a primary infection. The lack of either a change in myoelectric pattern or an earlier onset of intestinal myoelectric changes indicates that tapeworm-induced myoelectric activity is not anamnestically stimulated by host immunomodulatory mechanisms. Consistent with the second hypothesis, administration of either H. diminuta carcass homogenate or tegument-enriched fractions directly into the intestinal lumen of tapeworm-naive rats initiated myoelectric patterns previously characteristic of chronic H. diminuta infection. Additionally, the appearance of characteristic nonmigrating myoelectric patterns in uninfected rats administered tapeworm fractions indicates that a substance from H. diminuta acts as the triggering signal molecule for intestinal myoelectric alterations. These findings also indicate that neither the tapeworm's biomass nor its diurnal movement is required for initiation of H. diminuta-altered myoelectric patterns. We have shown that H. diminuta possess a signal molecule(s) that alters host enteric electric activity, and we suggest that these alterations may play an important role in the symbiotic rat-tapeworm interrelationship.
用肠道内寄生的微小膜壳绦虫感染大鼠,会引起宿主肠道平滑肌的电变化,并使肠腔转运减少。在这种非组织侵袭性感染过程中,刺激宿主肠道改变的机制可能包括绦虫的生物量、其昼夜迁移行为、宿主免疫介导的反应,或寄生虫对宿主运动活性的直接刺激。监测体内肠道肌电活动以评估以下内容:(1)再次感染微小膜壳绦虫是否受宿主免疫调节的影响;(2)将绦虫提取物给予从未感染过的大鼠是否会引发肠道平滑肌活动的改变。为验证第一个假设,我们确定,再次感染微小膜壳绦虫时肠道肌电活动模式的改变与初次感染时并无不同,且不会更早出现。肌电模式没有变化或肠道肌电变化没有提前出现,这表明绦虫诱导的肌电活动并非由宿主免疫调节机制进行回忆性刺激。与第二个假设一致,将微小膜壳绦虫的尸体匀浆或富含皮层的提取物直接注入未感染绦虫的大鼠肠腔,会引发先前慢性微小膜壳绦虫感染所特有的肌电模式。此外,在给予绦虫提取物的未感染大鼠中出现特征性的非迁移性肌电模式,表明来自微小膜壳绦虫的一种物质可作为肠道肌电改变的触发信号分子。这些发现还表明,启动微小膜壳绦虫改变的肌电模式既不需要绦虫的生物量,也不需要其昼夜移动。我们已经证明,微小膜壳绦虫具有一种能改变宿主肠道电活动的信号分子,我们认为这些改变可能在大鼠 - 绦虫共生关系中发挥重要作用。