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Publication : Trichinella spiralis: genetics of worm expulsion in inbred and F1 mice infected with different worm doses.

First Author  Bell RG Year  1984
Journal  Exp Parasitol Volume  58
Issue  3 Pages  345-55
PubMed ID  6542023 Mgi Jnum  J:27564
Mgi Id  MGI:75053 Doi  10.1016/0014-4894(84)90051-1
Citation  Bell RG, et al. (1984) Trichinella spiralis: genetics of worm expulsion in inbred and F1 mice infected with different worm doses. Exp Parasitol 58(3):345-55
abstractText  The nematode Trichinella spiralis is rejected from the intestine at a time that is characteristic for each inbred strain of mouse. Previous work (R. G. Bell et al. 1982a) had empirically identified strong, intermediate, and weak phenotypes (NFR, C3H/He, and C57B1/10 mice, respectively) in mice infected with 400 muscle larvae. It is shown that this classification applies to another eight inbred strains: SWR, DBA/2, DBA/1, LP, Bub/Bn--all intermediate, and NZB/BIN, C57L, A, and Mus molossinus--all weak. This phenotypic classification consistently applies with infections of 400-800 muscle larvae. Below doses of 300 muscle larvae, the strain designation of phenotype does not consistently apply. By this it is meant that the relative rejection rate changes for certain strains so that eventually some strains that were strong (NFR) or intermediate (AKR) responders to 400 muscle larvae become weak responders to 50 muscle larvae. Other strains increase their relative rejection time (B10 . BR, B10 . Q) while many do not change (NFS, C3Heb/Fe, DBA/2, DBA/1). The phenomenon is most apparent in inbred parental strains rather than in F1 crosses, and it represents a phenotypic variation in rejection time that is dependent on dose. It is also demonstrated that time of rejection is directly proportional to dose in all inbred and F1 mouse strains that we have examined. Analysis of F1 crosses shows that most have the rejection time of the strongest responding parental line, suggesting simple genetic control of strong, intermediate, and weak responses. Two F1 crosses invalidated this theory. The DBA/1 X C3H/He (intermediate X intermediate) showed a strong response. The additive effects of parental rejection phenotype indicated that these lines could not be genetically identical for intermediate responsiveness. Similarly, the NFR (strong) X B10 . BR (weak) F1 showed intermediate rejection, indicating partial dominance of C57B1/10 genes over the strong responder NFR strain. Neither the primary expulsion time phenotype, phenotypic variation to low doses, or the rejection characteristics of F1 crosses could be ascribed to genes linked to the major histocompatibility complex.
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