Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Fall E.H., Diagne M., Junker K., Duplantier Jean-Marc, Ba K., Vallée I., Bain O. (2012). Development of trichosomoides nasalis (nematoda: trichinelloidea) in the murid host: evidence for larval growth in striated muscle fibres. Parasite : Journal de la Société Française de Parasitologie, 19 (1), p. 19-29. ISSN 1252-607X.

Titre du document
Development of trichosomoides nasalis (nematoda: trichinelloidea) in the murid host: evidence for larval growth in striated muscle fibres
Année de publication
2012
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000301217400002
Auteurs
Fall E.H., Diagne M., Junker K., Duplantier Jean-Marc, Ba K., Vallée I., Bain O.
Source
Parasite : Journal de la Société Française de Parasitologie, 2012, 19 (1), p. 19-29 ISSN 1252-607X
Trichosomoides nasalis (Trichinelloidea) is a parasite of Arvicanthis niloticus (Muridae) in Senegal. Female worms that harbour dwarf males in their uteri, occur in the epithelium of the nasal mucosa. Young laboratory-bred A. niloticus were either fed females containing larvated eggs or intraperitoneally injected with motile first-stage larvae recovered from female uteri. Both resulted in successful infection. Organs examined during rodent necropsy were blood and lymphatic circulatory systems (heart, large vessels, lymphnodes), lungs, liver, kidneys, thoracic and abdominal cavities, thoracic and abdominal muscular walls, diaphragm, tongue, and nasal mucosa. Development to adult nasal stages took three weeks. Recovery of newly hatched larvae from the peritoneal fluid at four-eight hours after oral infection suggests a direct passage from the stomach or intestinal wall to the musculature. However, dissemination through the blood, as observed with Trichinella spiralis, cannot be excluded even though newly hatched larvae of T nasalis are twice as thick (15 mu m). Developing larvae were found in histological sections of the striated muscle of the abdominal and thoracic walls, and larvae in fourth moult were dissected from these sites. Adult females were found in the deep nasal mucosa where mating occurred prior to worms settling in the nasal epithelium. The present study shows a remarkable similarity between T nasalis and Trichinella species regarding muscle tropism, but the development of T. nasalis is not arrested at the late first-larval stage and does not induce transformation of infected fibres into nurse cells. T. nasalis seems a potential model to study molecular relations between trichinelloid larvae and infected muscle fibres.
Plan de classement
Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052] ; Sciences du monde animal [080]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010055697]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010055697
Contact
  • Coordonnées :
    Mission Science Ouverte (MSO)
    IRD - Délégation régionale Île-de-France & Ouest
    Campus Condorcet - Hôtel à projets
    8 cours des Humanités - 93322 Aubervilliers Cedex
    Horizon Pleins textes
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