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Clinical and Experimental Immunology logoLink to Clinical and Experimental Immunology
. 1987 Jan;67(1):20–30.

Homology and heterology between the secreted antigens of the parasitic larval stages of Ascaris lumbricoides and Ascaris suum.

M W Kennedy, F Qureshi, M Haswell-Elkins, D B Elkins
PMCID: PMC1542555  PMID: 3621674

Abstract

The materials released in vitro by the tissue-parasitic larval stages of the large roundworm of man, Ascaris lumbricoides, were analysed by radio-iodination, immunoprecipitation, and SDS-PAGE. The antigens were found to be heterogeneous, ranging in molecular weight from 14 to 410 kD, and were found to alter radically during the parasites' migration to the lungs. The antigens secreted by the infective and lung-stage larvae of the pig homologue, Ascaris suum, were compared with those of the human worms. This revealed a remarkable degree of homology between the products of the two, at both the molecular and immunological levels. The two species could be discriminated, however, on the basis of the SDS-PAGE profiles of the antigens secreted by both developmental stages of the parasites examined. Finally, antiserum to the canine ascarid infective to man, Toxocara canis, was found to precipitate a significant proportion of Ascaris-secreted molecules. These studies, therefore, confirm the potent antigenicity of excretory/secretory materials, and their potential for use in immunodiagnosis, but predict serious difficulties for seroepidemiology and the specific detection of ascariasis in man.

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Selected References

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