Fifty-day-old fry of tilapia hybrids (Oreochromis aureus x niloticus) were placed in aquaria containing sediment with oocysts of Eimeria (sensu lato) vanasi Landsberg et Paperna. In the first 29 h after exposure sporulated oocysts in the stomach and free sporozoites in the gut could be found in examined fish. By 7 to 56 h after exposure, sporozoites, with their characteristic crystalloid body, were detected in intraepithélial lymphocyte-like and other leucocyte-like cells, but never in the epithelial cells. Infected cells were confined to the epithelial layer and did not enter the lamina propria. Within this time, some of the sporo-zoitcs divided by endodyogeny, once or twice in succession, to form daughter sporozoites. The parent’s sporozoite crystalline body was divided between the offspring of the primary and secondary divisions.
Seven- to eight-week-old rabbits were infected with Eimeria intestinalis Cheissin, 1948, a highly immunogenic coccidium, or Eimeria flavescens Marotel et Guilhon, 1941, which is weakly immunogenic. Immune response was investigated at 7, 14 and 21 days post inoculation (DPI). The level of serum immunoglobulins, lymphocyte proliferation stimulated by parasite antigens and weight of mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) showed similar dynamics in rabbits inoculated with both coccidia species. The amount of serum IgG and IgM, but not IgA, was increased from 14 DPI. The lymphocytes from MLN of infected animals significantly reacted to stimulation with parasite antigen 14 and 21 DPI and MLN were enlarged at 14 DPI. Thus, both parasite species elicited immune response characterized by these parameters in a similar manner despite of their different immunogenicity. The only apparent difference in the responses was in the percentage of CD8+ lymphocytes in the specific site of parasite development (the last third of the small intestine in E. intestinalis, caecum in E. flavescens), which increased in rabbits infected with E. intestinalis but not with E. flavescens. This parameter reflects the status of local immunity and hence the results suggest that the local reaction plays an important role in induction of protective immunity to coccidia in rabbits.