Abstract

Levels of lysozyme activity were determined in the hemolymph, digestive gland, and headfoot extracts of M-line stock of snails, Biomphalaria glabrata, during infection with the PR-1 and Lc-1 strains of the trematode, Schistosoma mansoni. At 3 hr postexposure there was a 10-fold increase in the levels of enzyme activity in the hemolymph of snails infected with the Lc-1 strain to which the snail is resistant. This increase was considerably higher when compared to the threefold increase in the PR-1-infected snails. The infection also induced a gradual depletion of lysozyme activity in the headfoot muscles of the two groups of infected snails. There were no changes in the levels of enzyme activity in the digestive gland extracts of the control and the two groups of infected snails. Similar changes in the levels of enzyme activity in the hemolymph and headfoot extracts of infected snails suggest a nonspecific response to a parasite infection and do not indicate that lysozyme is primarily responsible for the destruction of schistosome parasite in a resistant snail host.

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