Abstract

A polyvalent antiserum (anti-H PR) generated in rabbits to cell-free hemolymph from a PR albino (M-line) stock of snail, Biomphalaria glabrata, was employed as a membrane probe to determine if antigens related to snail hemolymph were associated with the surface membranes of phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) washed hemocytes from a schistosome-susceptible (PR albino) and refractory (10-R2) stock of B. glabrata. Immunofluorescent and immunoelectron microscopical analyses revealed a strong cross-reactivity between anti-H PR antibodies and hemocytes from both PR albino and 10-R2 snails indicating the presence of surface-associated hemolymph or hemolymph-like antigens. Hemoglobin isolated from PR albino B. glabrata hemolymph competitively inhibited the binding of anti-H PR to hemocytes suggesting that cross-reactive membrane components were, at least in part, antigenically related to snail hemoglobin. Antigens reactive with antihemolymph antibodies also were resistant to protease treatment. No antigenic differences between PR albino and 10-R2 snail hemocytes could be detected due to the heterospecific nature of the probe antiserum, however, it is believed that the major cross-reactive membrane components, e.g., hemoglobin-like determinants, are shared in common by hemocytes of both snail stocks.

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