Abstract

Newly transformed skin-stage and lung-stage schistosomula were compared in terms of their susceptibility to killing mediated by activated mouse macrophages in vitro. Although skin-stage schistosomula were readily killed by macrophages activated as a consequence of either BCG or Schistosoma mansoni infection and used either as cell monolayers or in suspension, lung-stage larvae appeared to be totally resistant to this effector mechanism and survived normally when reinjected into mice. Resistance of schistosomula to in vitro damage by macrophages was evident as early as 18 hr after host infection and was complete in worms recovered at 42 hr. The insusceptibility of lung-stage larvae is apparently not due to a defect in effector cell-target contact, because the induction of extensive macrophage adherence to the worms by the addition of anti-mouse red blood cell antisera to the cultures had no effect on parasite viability. These findings provide additional support for the concept that schistosomula during their development to the lung stage undergo a generalized change affecting their susceptibility to a variety of different immunologic effector mechanisms.

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