Abstract

The mechanisms enabling fish tapeworms to avoid proteolytic attacks by digestive enzymes of their fish host have been studied in less detail compared with mammalian cestodes. This study aimed to assess the inhibitory ability towards trypsin and chymotrypsin in Eubothrium rugosum, an intestinal parasite of burbot Lota lota, and establish its localization in the tapeworm. To this end, the worms were treated with Triton X-100 followed by differential centrifugation to isolate the tegumental brush border membrane. The protease inhibitory abilities of the worms were mostly determined by their excretory/secretory products released into the incubation medium. These inhibitory abilities proved to be linked mainly with the brush border fractions. Notably, the per cent inhibition of both studied digestive enzymes (trypsin and chymotrypsin) hardly depended on the duration of the parasite exposure in the incubation medium, probably due to intermittent glycocalyx renewal. Improved knowledge on functions of the excretory/secretory proteins produced by fish tapeworms may contribute to a better understanding of host-parasite relations and development of new approaches to the treatment and prevention of diseases caused by pathogenic helminths.

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