Experimentally Produced Resistance of Schistosoma Mansoni to Hycanthone *
- 1 September 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene in The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene
- Vol. 26 (5), 926-936
- https://doi.org/10.4269/ajtmh.1977.26.926
Abstract
Genetically transferred resistance to the antischistosomal drug hycanthone has been observed in several strains of Schistosoma mansoni: 1) in the progeny of worms to whose hosts hycanthone had been administered 54 to 70 days after exposure to cercariae (Type I); 2) in the progeny of worms to whose hosts hycanthone had been administered when the worms were still in an immature stage (27 to 29 days after percutaneous cercarial exposure) (Type II); and 3) in the progeny of worms from hosts that had been infected with cercariae of one sex followed by infection with the opposite sex 2 to 58 weeks later (Type III). In types I and II, drug resistance was transferred maternally. Hycanthone-resistant schistosomes were cross-resistant to antischistosomal drugs structurally related to hycanthone, such as oxamniquine and two chloro-indazole analogs of hycanthone, but not to niridazole and to another nitroheterocyclic compound.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Meiotic Drive as an Evolutionary ForceThe American Naturalist, 1957
- Description of a Plastic Mouse Restraining CaseJournal of Parasitology, 1955