The lateral diffusion (DL) properties of the
fluorescent lipid probe 5-N (octadecanoyl) aminofluorescein (AF18)
inserted into the surface of muscle-stage larvae of Trichinella spiralis
were investigated by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. AF18 was
not free to diffuse laterally in dormant larvae, and this remained unchanged
after larval activation in vitro with trypsin and bile. However,
a significant increase in surface fluidity of the probe was demonstrated
(%R = 74·5; DL = 11·5 × 10−9
cm2/sec) when larvae invaded intestinal epithelial tissue
following oral infection of mice. Membrane-permeant photoactivatable caged
cyclic AMP was used to analyse the putative mechanism responsible for this
increase in lateral diffusion in the parasite surface. Although incubation
of larvae with 1–50 μM caged cAMP had no effect on surface
fluidity, incubation with 100 μM caged cAMP induced a substantial
increase in the lateral mobility of AF18 (%R = 64·3; DL
= 8·3 × 10−11 cm2/sec) immediately
following photo-activation of the caged messenger. This induced fluidity,
however, was transient and the larval surface reverted to immobility within
15 min. These observations constitute the first reported measurement of
the fluid properties of the surface of intracellular parasites, the first
demonstration of the parasite surface fluidity altering as a result of
host cell invasion and the first indication of a mechanism underlying changes
in surface fluidity in parasitic helminths.