Abstract

The snail, Biomphalaria glabrata, is a major intermediate host of the human blood fluke, Schistosoma mansoni, in the Americas. The inheritance and linkage relationships of a gene enabling adult snails to resist infection by a Puerto Rican strain of the parasite were analyzed using two laboratory stocks that differed in susceptibility, pigmentation, and five electrophoretically detectable enzyme markers. Segregation ratios in second-generation intraspecific hybrids between susceptible (M-stock) and resistant (10-R2-stock) snails indicate that the susceptibility gene is not linked to the enzyme (ACON-1, ACP, EST-2, PEP-2, PGD) or pigmentation loci studied. These seven loci assort independently of one another. Observed rates of infection among F1 and F2 progeny are consistent with Richards' finding that adult susceptibility to the PR-1 strain of S. mansoni is controlled by a single locus with resistance dominant. No association between allozymes of acid phosphatase and snail susceptibility to PR-1 was seen in the snail-parasite combinations studied.

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