Literature DB >> 486463

Induction of gel-phase lipid in plasma membrane of chick intestinal cells after coccidial infection.

J E Thompson, M A Fernando, J Pasternak.   

Abstract

When chickens are infected with the coccidial parasite Eimeria necatrix, the plasma membrane of intestinal cells harbouring second-generation schizonts becomes refractory to mechanical shearing, hypotonic shock and ultrasonication. Plasma membrane from these infected cells was isolated to high purity as judged by enriched levels of ouabain-sensitive (Na+ + K+)-stimulated Mg2-dependent ATPase activity and sialic acid content, the lack of detectable cytochrome oxidase and glucose-6-phosphatase activities and electron microscopic analysis of the final preparation. Wide-angle X-ray diffraction patterns recorded from the isolated membranes revealed that during the later stages of parasite maturation the host cell plasma membrane acquires increasing proportions of gel-phase lipid. By contrast, purified membrane from isolated parasites is in a liquid-crystalline state. The transition temperature of host cell plasmalemma at 100 h postinfection is 61 degrees C, about 20 degrees C above physiological temperature. By contrast, liposomes of plasma membranes from infected cells undergo a thermal transition at about 28 degrees C. The accumulation of gel-phase lipid in the host cell plasma membrane is not attributable either to an increase in the constituent ratio of saturated to unsaturated fatty acids or to a significant change in the cholesterol to phospholipid ratio. During the late stages of infection, the cells become stainable with trypan blue which suggests that the acquisition of crystalline phase lipid disrupts the permeability of the host cell plasmalemma.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 486463     DOI: 10.1016/0005-2736(79)90400-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta        ISSN: 0006-3002


  1 in total

1.  Flow cytometric analysis of Eimeria tenella sporozoite populations exposed to salinomycin sodium in vitro: a comparative study using light and electron microscopy and an in vitro sporozoite invasion-inhibition test.

Authors:  W Raether; H Mehlhorn; J Hofmann; B Bräu; K Ehrlich
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  1991       Impact factor: 2.289

  1 in total

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