Chemical communication in adult schistosomes |
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Authors: | M. A. Haseeb L. K. Eveland |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Microbiology and Immunology, State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, 11203 Brooklyn, New York;(2) Department of Microbiology, California State University, 90840 Long Beach, California |
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Abstract: | Lipids released bySchistosoma mansoni adult males attract females in vitro. Lipid release is modulated by the presence of other worms. AlthoughS. mansoni males release lipid when paired with females, the release is enhanced when they are separated.S. japonicum adults release more free sterols when incubated individually than when incubated together. Similarly, individually incubatedS. haematobium males release more free sterols than when incubated in groups. However,S. haematobium females incubated in groups release more free fatty acids than do equal numbers of males or pairs incubated in groups. There is evidence thatS. mansoni adult females concomitantly accumulate and release cholesterol in the absence of an exogenous supply, although de novo synthesis of cholesterol in schistosomes has not yet been demonstrated. Schistosomula and adult schistosomes incorporate exogenous lipids. Lipids are incorporated chiefly through the tegument. Cholesterol is transferred between males and females. |
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Keywords: | Trematoda Digenea Schistosoma mansoni Schistosoma japonicum Schistosoma haematobium behavior chemoattraction chemical communication pheromones lipids receptors histochemistry electron microscopy thin-layer chromatography |
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