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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 16 (1969), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: SYNOPSIS. Clones of Tritrichomonas foetus, referred to as strains KV-1, DK-2, and UT-1, which were judged by subcutaneous mouse assay to differ in pathogenicity, had different effects on trypsin-dispersed liver cell cultures prepared from 3 lines (Light Brown Leghorn, Massachusetts Brown, Massachusetts Low Growth) of chicks. The general pattern of parasite-cell interaction was similar in all cell cultures, but the intensity of certain responses of the cultures to trichomonads, reflected best in the levels of macrophage activity, depended on the line of chicks.The mild UT-1 strain was readily engulfed and digested by the macrophages, caused very little damage to the epithelial cells and fibroblasts, and had a minimal inhibitory effect on the division rate of the latter. Many abnormal changes were seen, however, in the cytoplasm and nucleil of fibroblasts and epithelial cells in cultures exposed to strains of high (KV-1) and intermediate (DK-2) pathogenicity or to cell-free filtrates of rich active cultures (henceforth referred to as filtrates) of these strains. The changes included retraction of cytoplasm which caused cell-free spaces to appear in the sheets of fibroblasts and around the epithelial islands; the islands became detached from the surrounding fibroblast sheets and tended to form multilayered cell mounds. The flagellates and filtrates of KV-1 strain greatly inhibited fibroblast division, and similar, but less pronounced, inhibitory effects were exerted by DK-2 strain and its filtrates. Trichomonads of all 3 strains did not attach themselves to fibroblasts and epithelial cells. Thus the abnormal changes in cultures infected with KV-1 and DK-2 parasites apparently were caused by some toxic substances produced by the trichomonads, which had to be responsible also for the identical changes in cultures exposed to filtrates of these strains. KV-1 and DK-2 strains inhibited the phagocytic activity of the macrophages in the early stages of infection, the former causing stronger and longer lasting inhibition. Trichomonads of KV-1 strain multiplied actively within the phagocytes which developed degenerative changes and ultimately burst, releasing healthy parasites into the medium. DK-2 flagellates, altho incapable of dividing inside the macrophages, usually were not digested and caused degeneration of the cells which contained them.
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