31P-NMR studies of the metabolisms of the parasitic helminths Ascaris suum and Fasciola hepatica
31P-NMR has been applied to the study of the metabolisms of the intact parasitic helminths Ascaris suum (the intestinal roundworm) and Fasciola hepatica (the liver fluke). After calibration of the chemical shift of P i in muscle extracts the internal pH of adult Ascaris worms and the effect of the p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 1986-07, Vol.248 (1), p.200-209 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | 31P-NMR has been applied to the study of the metabolisms of the intact parasitic helminths
Ascaris suum (the intestinal roundworm) and
Fasciola hepatica (the liver fluke). After calibration of the chemical shift of
P
i in muscle extracts the internal pH of adult
Ascaris worms and the effect of the pH of the external medium on the organism's internal pH were measured. Assignments of nearly all of the observable
31P resonances could be made. A large resonance from glycerophosphorylcholine whose function is unclear was observed but no signals from energy storage compounds such as creatine phosphate were detected. The profiles of the phosphorus-containing metabolites in both organisms were monitored as a function of time. Changes in sugar phosphate distributions but not ATP/ADP were observed. Studies of the drug closantel on
Fasciola hepatica were performed. Initial effects of the drug were a decrease in glucose 6-phosphate and an increase in
P
i with no substantial change in ATP levels as observed by
31P-NMR. Studies involving treatment with closantel followed by rapid freezing, extraction, and analytical determination of glycolytic intermediates confirmed NMR observations. This NMR method can serve as a simple noninvasive procedure to study parasite metabolism and drug effects on metabolism. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9861 1096-0384 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0003-9861(86)90417-0 |