The pivotal indispensable requirements for invasion by T.
spiralis are the physical support of agarose, the activation of the
larvae, and epithelial cell monolayers [7,26]. However, we also
found that when the larvae were suspended in liquid medium and
inoculated onto the monolayers, they used their heads to probe
and poke at the surfaces of cells, and then penetrated the IECs,
although only their heads were viewed in the cells under a light
microscope. Certainly, no trails of damaged cells can be observed
without agarose by providing a physical support for the worm.
The pivotal indispensable requirements for invasion by T.
spiralis are the physical support of agarose, the activation of the
larvae, and epithelial cell monolayers [7,26]. However, we also
found that when the larvae were suspended in liquid medium and
inoculated onto the monolayers, they used their heads to probe
and poke at the surfaces of cells, and then penetrated the IECs,
although only their heads were viewed in the cells under a light
microscope. Certainly, no trails of damaged cells can be observed
without agarose by providing a physical support for the worm.
การแปล กรุณารอสักครู่..