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1.
Ultrastructural observations on the invasion and early development of merozoites (bradyzoites) of Sarcocystis muris in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells are presented. Invading merozoites cause the host cell plasmalemma to invaginate; they form a membrane junction (moving junction) and move into the host cell where they are enclosed in a primary parasitophorous vacuole (PV). Within 30–45 min after becoming intracellular, merozoites begin to vacate the newly established primary PV and move, forming a new membrane junction, into a secondary PV. Simultaneously with the movement of the parasite, the contents of dense granules in the apical part of the merozoites are shed by exocytosis into the lumen of the developing secondary PV. A lamella of the endoplasmic reticulum of the host cell becomes attached to the PV membrane, forming a PV limited by three host cell membranes.  相似文献   

2.
First-generation development of Eimeria tuskegeensis was evaluated using light microscopy. Sporozoite-shaped meronts containing a prominent refractile body were observed in small intestinal cells of an experimentally infected cotton rat at 24 h post inoculation (PI). Mature spherical or subspherical meronts containing crescent-shaped merozoites were observed at 36 h PI. Refractile bodies were observed in some of these merozoites. Sporozoite-shaped meronts that were isolated from host intestinal cells and inoculated onto human fetal lung cell cultures penetrated the cultured cells by 2 h PI. A mature, subspherical, first-generation meront containing seven merozoites was observed at 9 h PI in cell culture, indicating that sporozoite-shaped meronts isolated from the host retained their infectivity.  相似文献   

3.
SYNOPSIS. Schizonts of E. nieschulzi lie in a vacuole within the host cell. After nuclear division the cell membrane invaginates forming merozoites. Differentiation of the pellicle and other organelles occurs while merozoites are still attached to the schizont cytoplasm. Merozoites have a pellicle thickened at the anterior end to form a polar ring. Radiating posteriorly from the ring, directly beneath the pellicle, are about 25 microtubules. Within the polar ring is a dense conoid. Extending posteriorly from within the conoid is a paired organelle. The paired organelle varies in size and shape in each generation of merozoites. Numerous toxonemes occupy the anterior half of the merozoites. Two paranuclear bodies are present in 1st generation merozoites. One or 2 granular bodies were seen in the anterior end of 2nd generation merozoites. In 3rd generation merozoites 6 or more granular bodies were seen anterior to the nucleus. Each merozoite has a single nucleus containing diffuse chromatin material. Elongate mitochondria and glycogen granules are present. The vacuole surrounding mature merozoites contains residual cytoplasm of the schizont and some granular material. Microvilli project into the vacuole from the host cell membrane.  相似文献   

4.
SYNOPSIS. A new species of avian malaria parasite is described from the pintail whydah Vidua macroura, a very small African finch of the weaver bird family (Ploceidae). Its structure has been studied chiefly in the canary, to which it is easily transmissible by blood inoculation. Since the segmenters most often produce 8 merozoites, the name Plasmodium octamerium n. sp. is proposed. Other characteristics include sexual stages which are usually elongate, often slender, and do not displace the host cell nucleus, and gametocytes indistinguishable from those of many species of Haemoproteus. Erythrocytes are the only blood cells parasitized. The new species resembles Plasmodium fallax in many respects, but gives rise to fewer merozoites and the asexual forms are smaller. Blood-induced infections are also of strikingly different type in some host species. Among susceptible host species are several kinds of finches, pigeons, quail, young chicks, chukars, tree and song sparrows. In most of these hosts infections are mild, but some tree sparrows die as the result of blood infection, and chukars usually die because of massive invasion of the capillary endothelium of the brain by exoerythrocytic forms. These are of the gallinaceum type and may be quite large, producing hundreds of merozoites. Exoerythrocytic stages were sought but not found in other host species.  相似文献   

5.
The mechanism of host invasion by Aggregata has been experimentally investigated both in vivo (in the crab), and in vitro (in mollusc cell cultures) and followed by electron microscopy. A few hours after the infesting meal, sporozoites escaped from sporocysts in the crab stomach: then they reached the small intestine. There, they pussed through the epithelium, making their way between the cells. Perforation of the thick basal lamina was induced by means of the elaboration of a dense product, probably an enzyme. Sporozoites stretched themselves passing through the basal lamina and entered the connective tissue surrounding the digestive tract. Damages inflicted on the host were minimal. In vitro, merozoites were able to enter cells from several molluscs by penetrating the cell's plasmalemma. A nucleolus appeared in the nuclei of intracellular merozoites.  相似文献   

6.
SYNOPSIS. A pure strain of Isospora felis derived from a single oocyst was used to study the endogenous cycle. One and a half to two-month-old laboratory-reared, coccidia-free kittens were used thruout the study. The endogenous stages occurred in the epithelial cells of the distal parts of the villi in the ileum and occasionally duodenum and jejunum. All stages lay above the host cell nucleus. There were 3 asexual generations. The 1st generation schizonts were 11–30 by 10–23 μ when mature and contained 16–17 banana-shaped merozoites 11–15 by 3–5 μ. They became mature in 96 or sometimes in 120 hours. The 1st generation merozoites entered new host cells, rounded up and formed 2nd generation schizonts. These formed within themselves 2–10 or more spindle-shaped bodies resembling 1st generation merozoites in shape and size. These were 2nd generation merozoites. They were uninucleate 120 hours after inoculation, but by 144 hours they became larger, multinucleate and some lost their elongate shape and became ovoid. They were then 3rd generation schizonts. They were 12–16 by 4–5 μ. Each formed up to 6 or more banana-shaped merozoites 6–8 by 1–2 μ. The 3rd generation schizonts and merozoites developed within the same host cell and parasitophorous vacuole as the 2nd generation schizonts and merozoites. Mature schizonts containing only 3rd generation merozoites appeared 144 hours after inoculation, were most abundant 168 hours after inoculation, and might be present as late as 216 hours after inoculation. They were 14–36 by 13–22 μ and contained 36 to more than 70 merozoites. The 3rd generation merozoites entered the sexual cycle. The mature microgametocytes were 24–72 by 18–32 μ and contained a central residuum and a large number of microgametes 5–7 by 0.8 μ with 2 posteriorly-directed flagella. The mature macrogametes were 16–22 by 8–13 μ. Gametogony occurred 144–216 hours after inoculation. The prepatent period was 168–192 hours and the patent period 10–11 days. Peak oocyst production occurred on the 6th day of the patent period.  相似文献   

7.
Plasmodium falciparum invades host erythrocytes by multiple invasion pathways. The invasion of erythrocytes by P. falciparum merozoites is a complex process that requires multiple interactions between host receptors and parasite ligands. A number of parasite proteins that mediate interaction with host receptors during invasion are localized to membrane‐bound apical organelles referred to as micronemes and rhoptries. The timely release of these proteins to the merozoite surface is crucial for receptor engagement and invasion. It has been demonstrated previously that exposure of merozoites to a low potassium (K+) ionic environment as found in blood plasma leads to a rise in cytosolic calcium (Ca2+), which triggers microneme secretion. The signalling pathways that regulate microneme discharge in response to rise in cytosolic Ca2+ are not completely understood. Here, we show that a P. falciparum Ca2+‐dependent protein phosphatase, calcineurin (PfCN), is an essential regulator of Ca2+‐dependent microneme exocytosis. An increase in PfCN activity was observed in merozoites following exposure to a low K+ environment. Treatment of merozoites with calcineurin inhibitors such as FK506 and cyclosporin A prior to transfer to a low K+ environment resulted in inhibition of secretion of microneme protein apical merozoite antigen‐1 (PfAMA‐1). Inhibition of PfCN was shown to result in reduced dephosphorylation and depolymerization of apical actin, which appears to be criticalfor microneme secretion. PfCN thus serves as an effector of Ca2+‐dependent microneme exocytosis by regulating depolymerization of apical actin. Inhibitors that target PfCN block microneme exocytosis and limit growth of P. falciparum blood‐stage parasites providing a novel approach towards development of new therapeutic strategies against malaria.  相似文献   

8.
SYNOPSIS The development of 1st generation schizonts of Eimeria callospermophili was studied with cell cultures and with experimentally infected host animals, Spermophilus armatus. Sporozoite-shaped schizonts each had 5-10 nuclei and all of the organelles of the sporozoite; each nucleus had a nucleolus and an associated Golgi apparatus. In stages immediately preceding merozoite formation, an intranuclear spindle apparatus with conical polar areas were observed near the outer margin of each nucleus. Two centrioles, each having 9 single peripheral tubules and one central tubule, were observed near each pole in some specimens. Merozoite formation began internally, with anlagen of 2 merozoites developing near each nucleus. The inner membrane of the merozoites first appeared as 2 dense thickenings adjacent to the polar cones and centrioles; subpellicular microtubules appeared simultaneously. Two anterior annuli and the conoid formed between the 2 thickenings. Vesicles, possibly of Golgi origin, were located next to the forming inner membrane. As the forming merozoites underwent elongation, a rhoptries anlage, a Golgi apparatus, refractile bodies, and mitochondria were incorporated into each. Sporozoite-shaped schizonts with merozoite anlagen transformed into spheroid or ovoid schizonts; at this time the conoid, rhoptries, micronemes, and the inner membrane of the pellicle gradually disappeared; several small refractile bodies were formed from the larger one. When development was about 1/3 complete, the immature merozoites began to grow outward from the surface of the schizont. In this phase of development, the single surface membrane of the schizont became the outer membrane of the merozoite's pellicle, and additional organelles, including the nucleus, were incorporated. Finally, the merozoites became pinched off, leaving a residual body. Development in cell cultures and host tissues was similar. This type of schizogony, previously undescribed in Eimeria, is compared with corresponding stages of development in other species of Eimeria and Sporozoa.  相似文献   

9.
SYNOPSIS. The development of Sarcocystis cruzi Hasselmann (syn. S. fusiformis Railliet) meronts was studied in seven 7- to 10-day-old calves killed 4, 7, 11, 15, 22, 25 and 28 days postinoculation (DPI) with 5 × 107 sporocysts from feces of coyotes. No meronts were found 4 and 7 DPI. Young and intermediate meronts with 1–16 nuclei were found in endothelial cells of arteries in mesenteric lymph nodes, but not in kidneys 11 DPI. Mature meronts were noted in endothelial cells of arteries, arterioles, or capillaries of many organs of calves killed 15 to 25 DPI. No first-generation meronts were found 28 DPI. By electron microscopy, all stages of the first-generation merogony were found free within the host cell cytoplasm and not within a parasitophorous vacuole. The appearance of intranuclear spindles preceded the formation of merozoites by endopolygeny. Mature meronts measured 41.0 × 17.5 (34–50 × 15–24) μm, contained ~ 100–350 merozoites, and had 2 to 4 relatively small residual bodies, 2.8 μm in diameter. Merozoites measured 6.3 × 1.5 (5.5–7 × 1 μm) and contained most of the organelles characteristically found in coccidian merozoites. Micropores were observed in merozoites, but not in young and intermediate meronts. Merozoites were seen free in the lumen of blood vessels, in intracellular areas, and free within the host cell cytoplasm.  相似文献   

10.
Ultrastructural observations on the invasion and early development of merozoites (bradyzoites) of Sarcocystis muris in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells are presented. Invading merozoites cause the host cell plasmalemma to invaginate; they form a membrane junction (moving junction) and move into the host cell where they are enclosed in a primary parasitophorous vacuole (PV). Within 30-45 min after becoming intracellular, merozoites begin to vacate the newly established primary PV and move, forming a new membrane junction, into a secondary PV. Simultaneously with the movement of the parasite, the contents of dense granules in the apical part of the merozoites are shed by exocytosis into the lumen of the developing secondary PV. A lamella of the endoplasmic reticulum of the host cell becomes attached to the PV membrane, forming a PV limited by three host cell membranes.  相似文献   

11.
A new procedure for isolating spontaneously released merozoites from in vitro cultures of Plasmodium falciparum (FVO and FCB strains) is described. The mature forms of relatively synchronous cultures containing predominantly trophozoites and few schizonts were concentrated with Plasmagel and then incubated at 37 C, without adding fresh red blood cells, until trophozoites matured into schizonts. Merozoites which were subsequently released were harvested and freed from host red blood cell material by low-speed centrifugations and nylon membrane sieves (3- and 1.2-μm pore size). From a culture containing about 5.2 × 109 mature-form parasites, a total of about 10.7 × 109 merozoites were released during three consecutive harvests and about 69% of these merozoites were recovered after the isolation and purification procedures. As demonstrated by both light and electron microscopy, most merozoites were morphologically intact and the merozoite preparations were free of host cell constituents. SDS-acrylamide gel electrophoresis confirmed the absence of host cell material and also showed that merozoites had a complex protein pattern of apparent molecular weights between 225 and 15 kdaltons. Such purified merozoite preparations will be invaluable for malaria immunization studies, for identification of protective antigens of P. falciparum, and for other immunological and biochemical studies.  相似文献   

12.
SYNOPSIS. Monolayer primary cultures of cells from bovine embryonic intestine (BEInt), kidney (BEK), spleen (BES), and thyroid (BETy) and cell line cultures of embryonic bovine trachea (EBTr) and synovium (BESy) as well as established cell line cultures of bovine kidney (Madin-Darby, MDBK), human intestine (Int 407) and Syrian hamster kidney (BHK) were inoculated with freshly excysted sporozoites of Eimeria alabamensis and observed for 4–5 days. Sporozoites penetrated all cell types; during the 1st 24 hr, intracellular sporozoites, trophozoites and binucleate schizonts were seen in all cell cultures. Mature schizonts were more numerous in BES and MDBK cells than in the others. Large schizonts, 14.2 (11–18.5) by 10.2 μ (8.5–11), with 6–14 short, stubby merozoites (each with 2 refractile bodies) occurred at 2 and 3 days in all cells except BESy, Int 407, and BHK. Small schizonts, 9.7 (5.5–13) by 6 μ (5–8.5), with 6–10 long, slender merozoites (each with 2 refractile bodies) were found 3 days after inoculation in all cell types. At 4 days, some intracytoplasmic merozoites and a few intranuclear 2nd generation trophozoites were found. After 4 days post-inoculation, intracellular parasites were rarely seen and these were apparently degenerate. Development within the host cell nucleus, the normal site of development in the host animal, was observed infrequently in cell cultures. Intranuclear sporozoites, found no earlier than 2 days after inoculation, developed similarly to those in the cytoplasm, and small intranuclear schizonts with 6–10 merozoites (each with 2 refractile bodies) occurred after 3 days in culture.  相似文献   

13.
ABSTRACT. Suckling mice were used as a model host to compare the endogenous development of three different isolates of Cryptosporidium: one from a naturally infected calf, one from an immunocompetent human with a short-term diarrheal illness, and one from a patient with acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) and persistent, life-threatening, gastrointestinal cryptosporidiosis. After oral inoculation of mice with oocysts, no differences were noted among developmental stages of the three isolates in their sites of infection, times of appearance, and duration, morphology, and fine structure. Sporozoites excysted within the lumen of the duodenum and ileum, penetrated into the microvillous region of villous enterocytes, and developed into type I meronts with six or eight merozoites. Type I merozoites penetrated enterocytes and underwent cyclic development as type I meronts or they became type II meronts with four merozoites. Type II merozoites did not exhibit cyclic development but developed directly into sexual forms. Microgamonts produced £16 small, bullet-shaped microgametes, which were observed attaching to and penetrating macrogametes. Approximately 80% of the oocysts observed in enterocytes had a thick, two-layered wall. After sporulating within the parasitophorous vacuole, these thick-walled oocysts passed through the gut unaltered and were the resistant forms that transmitted the infection to a new host. Approximately 20% of the oocysts in enterocytes consisted of four sporozoites and a residuum surrounded only by a single oocyst membrane that ruptured soon after the parasite was released from the host cell. The presence of thin-walled, autoinfective oocysts and recycling of type I meronts may explain why a small oral inoculum can produce an overwhelming infection in a suitable host and why immune deficient persons can have persistent, life-threatening cryptosporidiosis in the absence of repeated oral exposure to thick-walled oocysts.  相似文献   

14.
Lambs reared coccidia-free were inoculated orally with various numbers of sporulated oocysts of E. crandallis and were killed between 1 and 22 days after inoculation; tissues were examined histologically. Sporozoites were seen 1, 2 and 3 days after inoculation (DAI) in crypt epithelial cells in the mid-jejunum. Infected cells migrated into the lamina propria where the parasite within them developed into a firstgeneration meront containing about 250,000 merozoites at 10 DAI. A second generation of meronts was seen at 10–12 DAI, each containing up to about 10 merozoites, situated mainly at the bases of crypts in the jejunum and ileum but also in the caecum. From 11 DAI pro-gamonts were seen which were enveloped by the host cell nucleus and which divided in synchrony with the host cell for an undetermined number of generations. Mature gamonts began to develop from them by 16 DAI. Oocyst output began at 16 DAI and rose to a peak at about 22 DAI. Up to 108 oocysts were produced per oocyst inoculated. They showed wide variation in size and colour.  相似文献   

15.
To establish an in vitro culture system for the precystic phase of Sarcocystis singaporensis, we initially tested various excysting fluids for sporocysts. An excysting fluid containing 2.5% bovine taurocholate and 10% bile of the specific intermediate host, Rattus norvegicus, in RPMI medium was the most suitable resulting in excystation of 80% of the sporozoites. Subsequently, we identified brain endothelial cells and pneumonocytes of the rat to promote growth of sporozoites to schizonts. Hepatoma, fibroblastic, or myoblastic cells were not suitable for the parasite's development. First-generation schizonts were seen at days 3-10 postinoculation (PI); a distinct second peak of schizogonic development only occurred in endothelial cells at days 14-18 PI. First-generation schizonts were 26.0 (± 3.8) μm in diameter and contained 32-50 merozoites, second-generation schizonts measured 34.4 (± 10.6) μm and contained 54-72 merozoites. Merozoite yield at large-scale culture conditions (75 cm2 flasks) using pneumonocytes as host cells was relatively low. Ultrastructurally, sporozoites and merozoites were quite similar to corresponding stages of other Sarcocystis species. With regard to host cell specificity and developmental kinetics, in vitro cultivation showed close similarities to the situation in vivo.  相似文献   

16.
The fine structure of exoerythrocytic merogony of Plasmodium berghei was studied after perfusion-fixation of rat livers from 51 h post-inoculation onwards. Meroblast formation was effected by clefts originating from the parasite plasmalemma and by fusion of vacuoles with each other. Invaginations at the periphery resulted in labyrinthine structures providing the parasites with an enormous increase in surface area, which might facilitate exchange of metabolites. When the parasitophorous vacuole membrane collapsed, the newly formed merozoites were lying free in the hepatocytic cytoplasm, which degenerated until the merozoites were sticking together by a stroma, obviously a remnant of the host hepatocyte. Groups of merozoites, still kept together by the spongy stroma, were subsequently released in the bloodstream. At 53 h most of the developmental stages leading to the release of merozoites could be found and thereafter parasite numbers decreased while large granulomas became apparent.  相似文献   

17.
A new Mexican species of saurian malaria parasite,Plasmodium (Sauramoeba) pelaezi, is described from the iguanid lizardUrosaurus bicarinatus bicarinatus. Two out of 12 specimens collected at Chila de la Sal (Puebla, México) were found infected. The species is characterized by round and oval gametocytes. Schizonts are mostly round with a single mass of pigment and with 16 merozoites in mature forms. Gametocytes cause shrinkage of infected cells and schizonts render the host cell nuclei spherical.  相似文献   

18.
SYNOPSIS. Eimeria bovis merozoites occurred in tissue culture medium removed from Leighton tube cultures of embryonic bovine tracheal cells beginning 12-14 days after inoculation with 270,000-369,000 sporozoites per tube. The number of merozoites produced in these cultures increased daily until a peak was reached 18-21 days after inoculation. In 3 experiments an average of 2.0–15.6 million merozoites per tube was produced during the 20-day observation period. When such merozoites were frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored 26–42 days, some were motile upon thawing. These merozoites as well as others freshly obtained from cell cultures and from calves were inoculated into 11 different types of cultured mammalian cells including primary, cell line and established cell line cultures. Some merozoites were exposed to substances normally found in the lumen of the gut, before or at the time of inoculation. Altho small numbers of intracellular merozoites were found, no further development was observed. Gametocytes were observed in the cecum of a calf 4 days after merozoites from cell cultures were introduced into a ligated cecum of the calf.  相似文献   

19.
First-generation development of Eimeria tuskegeensis was evaluated using light microscopy. Sporozoite-shaped meronts containing a prominent refractile body were observed in small intestinal cells of an experimentally infected cotton rat at 24 h post inoculation (PI). Mature spherical or subspherical meronts containing crescent-shaped merozoites were observed at 36 h PI. Refractile bodies were observed in some of these merozoites. Sporozoite-shaped meronts that were isolated from host intestinal cells and inoculated onto human fetal lung cell cultures penetrated the cultured cells by 2 h PI. A mature, subspherical, first-generation meront containing seven merozoites was observed at 9 h PI in cell culture, indicating that sporozoite-shaped meronts isolated from the host retained their infectivity.  相似文献   

20.
A new species of haemogregarina, Haemogregarina nototheniae, is described from the Southern ocean teleosts Notothenia neglecta and Notothenia rossii. Stages identified as macro- and microschizogony and gametogony are described in mononuclear leukocytes from fish caught during the austral summer. The mature gametocyte is the most commonly found stage: it is exoerythrocytic, but carries the host erythrocyte nucleus attached to its external surface near one end. The gametocyte has a central nucleus and 2–16 subterminal eosinophilic granules, but no polar cap. During microschizogony the schizont nucleus undergoes repeated division without cytoplasmic division to give 32 nuclear masses, all of which appear to be in metaphase. Cytoplasmic division yields free merozoites identifiable by the coarse chromatin of the nuclear area. During macroschizogony the intraleukocytic parasite swells to a subspherical mass with a median band of fine heterochromatin granules. The cytoplasm later divides, forming three merozoites. There appear to be two routes by which merozoites proceed to become gametocytes: in winter small merozoites are seen in mature erythrocytes; but in summer, in erythroblasts. The invertebrate definitive host and the means of transmission are unknown, but the parasite is provisionally assigned to the genus Haemogregarina.  相似文献   

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