Abstract

Davey K. G., Sommerville R. I. and Rogers W. P. 1982. The effect of ethoxyzolamide, an analogue of insect juvenile hormone, nor-adrenaline and iodine on changes in the optical path difference in the excretory cells and oesophagus during exsheathment in Haemonchus contortus. International Journal for Parasitology 12: 509–513. Ethoxyzolamide, an inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase, markedly inhibits exsheathment of Haemonchus when the larvae are subsequently exposed to an exsheathing stimulus of CO 2 at 38.5°C. Ethoxyzolamide at 2 × 10 −5 M does not prevent the increase in optical path difference in the oesophageal region which normally accompanies exsheathment, but markedly inhibits the increase in optical path difference in the excretory cells. An analogue of juvenile hormone (JHA; the methyl ester of 3,7,11 trimethyl-7,11-dichloro-2-dodecenic acid) does not affect the optical path difference in either the oesophagus or the excretory cells of ensheathed worms. When worms are artificially desheathed by exposure to NaOCl, a procedure which mimics the effect of CO 2 upon the oesophagus, but which does not affect the excretory cells, subsequent exposure to JHA at room temperature increases the optical path difference in the excretory cells. This increase is enhanced by subsequent incubation of the worms at 38.5°C at 30–60 min and further enhanced when CO 2 is present during the incubation at 38.5°C. The stimulation of the excretory cells by JHA is inhibited by ethoxyzolamide at 2 × 10 −5 M. Noradrenaline at 10 −3 M has no effect on ensheathed larvae, but causes an increase in optical path difference in the excretory cells of larvae desheathed with NaOCl. This increase is inhibited by ethoxyzolamide. A brief exposure to I 2 blocks the response of the excretory cells of both CO 2 and JHA, but does not significantly reduce the effect of nor-adrenaline. On the basis of these and previous results, it is proposed that both CO 2 and JHA stimulate a hypothetical CO 2 receptor which leads to the release of nor-adrenaline. The noradrenaline in turn stimulates, either directly or indirectly, the excretory cells.

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