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Division of Biology, Kansas State University, Manhattan 66506, USA. coccidia/ksu.edu
The authors examined the effects of manganese salts on the interaction of the AIDS-related pathogen, Cryptosporidium parvum, with human ileoadenocarcinoma (HCT-8) cells in vitro. Manganese (Mn) inhibited binding of C. parvum sporozoite membrane antigens to intact, fixed HCT-8 cells in a dose-dependent fashion, whereas Ca++, Mg++, and Zn++ salts had no effect. Manganese was also found to affect sporozoite penetration of live HCT-8 cells, which resulted in a dose-dependent inhibition of parasite development. However, the levels of Mn++ needed in the live cell assays was approx 10-fold greater than in the fixed-cell assays. This inhibition of parasite development was not reversible when Ca++ or Mg++ were used as competitors. Oral supplementation of suckling mice infected with C. parvum with MnSO4 resulted in significant reductions and, in some cases, elimination of intestinally derived oocysts.
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