Abstract
SUMMARYTsetse flies were infected with 5 different variable antigen types (VATs) or with a mixture of VATs of the AnTAR 1 serodeme ofTrypanosoma brucei. Metacyclic forms from the salivary glands of infected flies were used to initiate infections in mice. Immunofluorescence and trypanolysis reactions employing 24 monospecific antisera were used to analyse the VATs present in the mice following cyclical transmission. Regardless of the VAT used to infect tsetse flies, the first VATs detectable in the bloodstream were those previously identified as metacyclic VATs (M-VATs). These were present until at least 5 days after infection, at which time lytic antibodies against at least 2 of the M-VATs were detectable in the blood of infected mice. In mice immunosuppressed by X-irradiation the M-VATs were detectable in the bloodstream for longer periods, but the percentage of the population labelled with anti-metacyclic sera showed a decrease on day 5 as in non-irradiated animals. The VAT ingested by the tsetse was always detectable early during the first parasitaemia following cyclical transmission and was usually the first VAT detected after the M-VATs. Neutralization of selected M-VATs before infecting mice resulted in elimination of the neutralized M-VAT from the first parasitaemia but had no effect on the expression of other VATs in the early infection.
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