@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00026361, author = {Ohno, Tamio and Kai, Takuya and Miyasaka, Yuki and Maruyama, Haruhiko and Ishih, Akira and Kino, Hideto}, issue = {4}, journal = {Parasitology International}, month = {Aug}, note = {Hymenolepis diminuta is a parasitic tapeworm of the rat small intestine and is recognized as a useful model for the analysis of cestode-host interactions. In this study, we analyzed factors affecting the biomass of the tapeworm through use of rat strains carrying genetic mutations, namely X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (xscid; T, B and NK cells deficiency), nude (rnu; T cell deficiency), and mast cell deficient rats. The worm biomass of F344-xscid rats after infection with 5 cysticercoids was much larger than control F344 rats from 3 to 8 weeks. The biomass of F344-rnu rats was also larger than the controls, but was intermediate between F344-xscid and control rats. These observations demonstrated that host immunity can control the maximal tapeworm biomass, i.e., carrying capacity, of the rat small intestine. Both T cell and other immune cells (B and NK cells) have roles in determining the carrying capacity of tapeworms. Total worm biomass and worm numbers in mast cell deficient rats (WsRC-Ws/Ws) were not significantly different from control WsRC-+/+ rats after 3 and 6 weeks of primary infection. Mast cell deficient rats displayed reinfection resistance for worm biomass but not worm expulsion. These findings suggest that the mast cell has a role for controlling the biomass of this tapeworm in reinfection alone, but does not affect the rate of worm expulsion. Overall, our findings indicate that the mast cell is not a major effector cell for the control of the carrying capacity of tapeworms. The identity of the major effector cell remains unknown., ファイル公開:2019-08-01}, pages = {357--361}, title = {Intestinal immunity suppresses carrying capacity of rats for the model tapeworm, Hymenolepis diminuta}, volume = {67}, year = {2018} }