Abstract

Infective stage and early parasitic larvae of Ascaris suum were evaluated for surface reactivity with serum from uninfected and hyperimmune guinea-pigs. Cuticular binding of serum components was assessed by the mixed antiglobulin test. Ensheathed infective larvae bound both normal serum proteins and 7S protein from immune serum over the entire sheath surface. Parasitic larvae recovered at 16 and 25 h post infection (h.p.i.) were poorly reactive, and binding occurred only to sites on the head and tail regions. Larvae recovered at 48 and 72 h.p.i. were highly reactive over the entire cuticle. Host serum protein was not detectable on the surface of parasitic larvae when harvested from guineapigs after a primary infection until the larvae had been in the host for 72 h. However larvae recovered from hyperimmune animals had host serum protein detectable on the cuticle as early as 16 h.p.i.

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