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1.
Dev Comp Immunol ; 105: 103579, 2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31877327

ABSTRACT

As one of the most successful invasive land snail species, Achatina (Lissachatina) fulica Bowdich, 1822 has achieved wide global distribution, particularly in (sub)tropical regions, with further dispersal likely due to climate change. This species of giant African snails (up to 17 cm shell length) is a pest that has extensive negative impact on agriculture and can serve as vector for several parasites, including Angiostrongylus cantonensis, a nematode parasite that causes (human) eosinophilic meningitis, an emergent disease. Investigation showed that A. cantonensis infection negatively impacts the metabolism of A. fulica by depleting polysaccharide stores of the intermediate host, compromising the energy balance of the snail. A review of the literature indicates that A. fulica possesses potent innate type immune defenses to counter infection, including phagocytic hemocytes capable of deploying reactive oxygen species and lectins for non-self recognition, a serine protease-dependent coagulation response (not observed in other taxa of gastropods), as well as antimicrobial proteins including achacin, an antimicrobial protein. A recent chromosome level genome assembly will facilitate progressively detailed characterization of these immune features of A. fulica. We strongly encourage further immunological studies of A. fulica, ranging from organismal level to molecular biology to gain better understanding of the A. fulica internal defense response to nematode pathogens like A. cantonensis and the contribution of immune function to the invasiveness of (snail) species. Characterization of immunity of A. fulica, representing the understudied Stylommatophora (panpulmonate landsnails) will also broaden the comparative immunology of Gastropoda.


Subject(s)
Angiostrongylus cantonensis/physiology , Meningitis/parasitology , Snails/physiology , Strongylida Infections/immunology , Animals , Antimicrobial Cationic Peptides/metabolism , Brazil , Communicable Diseases, Emerging , Disease Vectors , Host-Parasite Interactions , Humans , Immune System , Immunity, Innate , Introduced Species , Rats , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Receptors, Pattern Recognition/metabolism
2.
Front Immunol ; 10: 328, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31024517

ABSTRACT

Sympatric snail populations have been kept in the laboratory since the isolation of the parasite from the field. To evaluate the influence of the intermediate host in the infectivity of S. mansoni, this allopatric strain was compared to two sympatric strains, from different geographical origins, and with different time of maintenance in the laboratory. Snail-trematode compatibility was accessed for a total of nine possible combinations (three snail populations, three schistosome strains), using different charges of parasite: 1, 5, 10, and 15 miracidia/snail. Each S. mansoni strain was characterized according to its infectivity phenotype that reflects the efficiency of their infection mechanism and all B. glabrata populations were characterized according to its (in)compatible phenotype that reflects the level of (un)susceptibility they display. For all host-parasite combinations tested the dose-response relation indicated a trend for an increase in the infectivity of S. mansoni when higher miracidial doses were used. SmRES-2 presented the highest overall infectivity rate, especially in the SmRES-2/BgRES interaction with 15 miracidia/snail. However, SmRES was more infective to BgBAR than SmRES-2, indicating that SmRES strain was more infective at the first contact with this new host than after 2 years of interaction (SmRES-2). BgBAR presented the highest susceptibility to infection. SmRES and SmRES-2 are the same parasite strains. It seems that during these 2 years of interaction, BgBAR acted like a filter and shifted the compatibility polymorphism of the strain SmRES. SmRES-2 became more infective to BgRES (sympatric) than to BgBAR (allopatric), and conversely, SmRES was more infective to BgBAR (allopatric) than to BgRES (sympatric). This interplay suggests that epigenetic mechanisms are prompting these changes. This study concerns with infection of B. glabrata snails from different Brazilian localities with S. mansoni in allopatric and sympatric associations that will partially help in understanding the natural epidemiology of schistosomiasis within natural snail populations in watercourses. This work demonstrates that there is a shift on the compatibility polymorphism profile resulting from sympatric and allopatric interactions of B. glabrata and S. mansoni that constantly change during the time of interaction.


Subject(s)
Biomphalaria/parasitology , Host-Parasite Interactions/physiology , Schistosomiasis mansoni/parasitology , Trematoda/pathogenicity , Animals , Brazil , Disease Vectors , Phenotype , Schistosoma mansoni/parasitology , Snails/parasitology
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