Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations

It has been known for many years that Trichinella spiralis initiates infection by penetrating the columnar epithelium of the small intestine, however, the mechanisms used by the parasite in the establishment of its intramulticellular niche in the intestine are unknown. The recent demonstration that...

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Main Authors: Romarís F., Appleton J. A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2001-06-01
Series:Parasite
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200108s2048
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spelling doaj-4fc517d89717440285c4faa0e332d5872021-02-02T01:45:40ZengEDP SciencesParasite1252-607X1776-10422001-06-018S48S5010.1051/parasite/200108s2048parasite200108s2p48Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observationsRomarís F.Appleton J. A.It has been known for many years that Trichinella spiralis initiates infection by penetrating the columnar epithelium of the small intestine, however, the mechanisms used by the parasite in the establishment of its intramulticellular niche in the intestine are unknown. The recent demonstration that invasion also occurs in vitro when infective larvae of T. spiralis are inoculated onto cultures of epithelial cells provides a model that allows the direct observation of the process by which the parasite recognizes, invades and migrates within the epithelium. The finding that penetration of the cell membrane or Induction of plasma membrane wounds by larvae do not always result in invasion argue in favor of some kind of host-parasite communication in successful invasion. In this sense, the in vitro model of invasion provides a readily manipulated and controlled system to investigate both parasite, and host cell requirements for invasion.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200108s2048Trichinella spiralisinvasionepithelial cellsin vitro
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Romarís F.
Appleton J. A.
spellingShingle Romarís F.
Appleton J. A.
Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
Parasite
Trichinella spiralis
invasion
epithelial cells
in vitro
author_facet Romarís F.
Appleton J. A.
author_sort Romarís F.
title Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
title_short Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
title_full Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
title_fullStr Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
title_full_unstemmed Invasion of epithelial cells by Trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
title_sort invasion of epithelial cells by trichinella spiralis: in vitro observations
publisher EDP Sciences
series Parasite
issn 1252-607X
1776-1042
publishDate 2001-06-01
description It has been known for many years that Trichinella spiralis initiates infection by penetrating the columnar epithelium of the small intestine, however, the mechanisms used by the parasite in the establishment of its intramulticellular niche in the intestine are unknown. The recent demonstration that invasion also occurs in vitro when infective larvae of T. spiralis are inoculated onto cultures of epithelial cells provides a model that allows the direct observation of the process by which the parasite recognizes, invades and migrates within the epithelium. The finding that penetration of the cell membrane or Induction of plasma membrane wounds by larvae do not always result in invasion argue in favor of some kind of host-parasite communication in successful invasion. In this sense, the in vitro model of invasion provides a readily manipulated and controlled system to investigate both parasite, and host cell requirements for invasion.
topic Trichinella spiralis
invasion
epithelial cells
in vitro
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/parasite/200108s2048
work_keys_str_mv AT romarisf invasionofepithelialcellsbytrichinellaspiralisinvitroobservations
AT appletonja invasionofepithelialcellsbytrichinellaspiralisinvitroobservations
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