Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4371268 | Experimental Parasitology | 2011 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Alveolar echinococcosis is caused by the metacestode stage of the fox tapeworm Echinococcus multilocularis. Current chemotherapeutical options for the treatment of echinococcosis are not satisfactory, and novel drugs and/or other potential means of therapy are needed. E. multilocularis metacestodes are characterized by almost potentially unlimited growth, and also display other features of cancerous tumours. In this study, we exposed metacestodes that were generated in vitro to 50-100Â Gy ionizing irradiation, and subsequently investigated the short-term (10-12Â days post-treatment) and long-term (14Â weeks post-treatment) effects. We found, that in the short-term, no release of alkaline phosphatase (EmAP) activity as a measure for potentially induced damage and loss of viability could be detected, and that the protein expression pattern and protease activities in vesicle fluids and medium supernatants did not alter dramatically following irradiation. However, irradiation was associated with distinct morphological and ultrastructural alterations in the tissue of metacestodes, affecting most notably cell-cell contacts, mitochondrial shape, glycogen-storage cells and lipid droplet formation. These could be detected already at 10Â days following treatment and remained as such also in the long-term. In addition, as determined after 14Â weeks of culture, irradiation affected the proliferation and the growth of E. multilocularis metacestodes. Thus, we demonstrate that radiotherapy does not have a clear-cut parasitocidal effect, but can lead to metabolic impairment of E. multilocularis metacestodes, as reflected by the distinct morphological and structural alterations induced by irradiation treatment.
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Authors
Sebastian Pohle, Raoul Ernst, Colin MacKenzie, Martin Spicher, Thomas Romig, Andrew Hemphill, Stephan Gripp,