In an in vitro cytotoxicity assay, mouse adherent peritoneal exudate macrophages (APEM), harvested 8-10 weeks post Schistosoma mansoni infection caused sizable (greater than 90%) specific killing of schistosomula. This cidal effect was not diminished by the addition of scavengers of oxidative burst products to the cytotoxicity assay, albeit macrophages from schistosome-infected mice produced more H2O2 than did macrophages from non-infected mice. Of inhibitors of lysosomal enzyme function and release added to the cytotoxicity assay, trypan blue (1 mg/ml) fully abolished the schistosomulicidal effect; hydrocortisone (100 micrograms/ml) was partly effective, and gold salts (1 mg/ml) were ineffective. A cidal effect was not apparent in the absence of L-arginine nor in the presence of excess (greater than 400 micrograms/ml) L-arginine, L-lysine or L-ornithine. Arginase (5 U/ml) totally abrogated the schistosomulicidal effect. The findings suggest that a macrophage protein of a lysosomal origin, dependent on arginine for its reaction and/or production, may be involved in the in vitro killing of schistosomula by macrophages from S. mansoni-infected mice.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0171-2985(87)80100-6DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Schistosomes are skilled at evading human immunity, particularly the complement system, allowing them to survive in human blood for years; this study explores how they interact with this immune response.
  • The research shows that newly formed schistosomula are initially very vulnerable to complement attack, but they can rapidly boost their survival rate, especially when they recruit complement regulator factor H to avoid destruction.
  • The use of the drug praziquantel increases the susceptibility of schistosomula to complement-mediated killing, suggesting that further investigation into factor H's role could help develop new treatments against schistosomes.
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