首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Amblyomma americanum (Linneaus) (Acari: Ixodidae), an important tick vector of human and animal disease, is not a competent vector of the bacterial agent of Lyme disease, Borrelia burgdorferi, although its range overlaps the geographical distribution of Lyme disease within the United States. A possible mechanism that could prevent acquisition of B. burgdorferi spirochetes from infected hosts is the toxic effect of A. americanum saliva on B. burgdorferi. The data presented here indicate that after 24 and 48 h of exposure to A. americanum saliva, significantly fewer B. burgdorferi were alive compared to treatment controls as assessed by spirochete motility under dark-field microscopy and resistance to the dead stain, propidium iodide. After 48 h, fewer than 13% of saliva-exposed B. burgdorferi were alive. In contrast, significantly more B. burgdorferi exposed to Ixodes scapularis (Acari: Ixodidae) saliva survived after 24 or 48 h compared to A. americanum saliva or treatment controls.  相似文献   

2.
3.
4.
5.
Summary Haller's organ on the tarsus of the tick Amblyomma americanum (L.) (Acarina: Ixodidae; nymphal stage) was studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. It consists of a distal bristle group, (the anterior pit), and a proximal capsule which encloses several sensilla. The seven sensilla of the anterior pit (A1–A7) are all thick-walled and multi-innervated (2–9 neurons), but at least three different types can be differentiated. Sensilla A1 and A2 possess large, plugged pores (>1000 Å) and are the only sensilla with branching dendrites. A3 and A5 are characterized by a spoke-wheel arrangement of the cuticle wall and very fine pores (100–200 Å) penetrating the spokes centrally; A4, A6, and A7 do not exhibit any pore system but a single opening at the bristle tip is assumed.The capsule contains seven thin-walled, blunt-tipped sensilla, and several non-sensory cuticular projections (pleomorphs). All of these sensilla possess large plugged pores in the cuticle wall and numerous dendritic branches of several neurons (3–5) in the lumen. Glandular openings were found inside the capsule; their significance is discussed.The fine structure of Haller's organ supports the functions postulated by Lees (1948), namely olfaction for the capsule and humidity reception (among others) for the anterior pit.This research was supported in part by the Office of Naval Research, and by NIH Training grant ES 00069. Paper no. 3459 of the Journal Series of the North Carolina State University Agricultural Experiment Station, Raleigh.  相似文献   

6.
Laboratory-reared and field-collected Amblyomma americanum ticks were hosts of a Coxiella sp. and a Rickettsia sp. While the Coxiella sp. was detected in 50 of 50 field-collected ticks, the Rickettsia sp. was absent from 32% of ticks. The Coxiella sp. showed evidence of a reduced genome and may be an obligate endosymbiont.  相似文献   

7.
To quantify microbial composition and interactions, we identified prokaryotic communities in the lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum) based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and direct probing. The lone star tick is the vector of emerging diseases and host to additional symbionts of unknown activity, and is representative of other blood‐sucking arthropods. We evaluated the potential for vertical (transovarial) transmission by molecular analysis of microbial symbionts from egg and larval clutches. Direct probing of adults (N = 8 populations from the southeastern and midwestern USA, 900 ticks total) revealed three vertically transmitted symbionts: a Coxiella symbiont occurred at 100% frequency, Rickettsia species occurred in 45–61% of all ticks in every population and an Arsenophonus symbiont occurred in 0–90% of ticks per population. Arsenophonus and Rickettsia exhibited significant heterogeneity in frequency among populations. The human pathogens Ehrlichia chafeensis and Borrelia lonestari were rare in most populations. Additional microbes were detected sporadically. Most ticks (78%) were co‐infected by two or three microbes but statistical analysis indicated no significant deviation from random co‐occurrence. Our findings indicate that microbial communities within lone star ticks are diverse, and suggest that direct probing for a wider range of prokaryotes and application of quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) may provide further insights into microbial interactions within disease vectors. Our results also emphasize the close phylogenetic relationship between tick symbionts and human pathogens, and consistent differences in their prevalence.  相似文献   

8.
9.
《Insect Biochemistry》1987,17(6):883-890
Salivary glands of female Amblyomma americanum (L.) are stimulated to differentiate by attachment to a host, subsequent feeding and mating. Incorporation of [3H]uridine into ribosomal and transfer RNAs as well as the synthesis of poly(A+)mRNA and protein parallel the pattern of increasing enzymatic activity and secretory ability of the glands. Unfed ticks contained 3.5 ± 0.47 ng poly(A+)mRNA/gland pr. By the second day of feeding this had increased more than 5-fold. The greatest amount of poly(A+)mRNA found in rapid-feeding phase females (body wt > 100 mg) was 370 ± 80 ng/gland pr. Poly(A+)mRNA mass doubles on the final day of feeding, just as the ticks exceeded 100 mg in wt. Ticks attached 1 to 10 days had increasingly greater amounts of salivary monosomes, 60 and 40S ribosomal subunits, and polysomes. Polysomal mass/gland pr also attained its maximum above 100 mg tick wt at the slow/rapid-feeding phase boundary; exceeding by 20 times that of unfed ticks. Degenerating glands from replete ticks continued to synthesize protein. In vitro incorporation of [3H]leucine was greatest within 24 h of attachment. Fluorographs of [3H]leucine labeled protein showed that mating caused a drop in incorporation after the 4th day of feeding. Glands from unmated females attached the same number of days continued to incorporate [3H]leucine at higher levels than those from mated females.  相似文献   

10.
Salivary gland antigens involved in host resistance to tick feeding by Amblyomma americanum (lone star tick) have been identified. Gland extracts from unfed and partially fed 12-, 48-, 72-, 96-, and 120-hr females and their corresponding midgut tissues were analyzed by immunoblotting with sera from naturally immune and hyperimmune sheep and rabbits. Polypeptides at 90, 75, 58, 45, 33, and 23 kDa from the salivary glands of A. americanum females were consistently observed with antibodies from both sheep and rabbits. No antigens unique to tick midgut tissue were detected with immune sera. Female Dermacentor variabilis and Ixodes dammini shared 90- and 45-kDa salivary gland antigens with A. americanum, and these may represent conserved polypeptides. We speculate that some of the salivary gland antigens represent components of tick cement, while others are playing some other yet undetermined role in tick feeding.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Palps of the tick Amblyomma americanum (L.) (Acarina: Ixodidae; nymphal stage) were studied by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The terminal palp segment (IV) bears the so-called palpal organ, a cluster of 10 short, blunt-tipped sensilla. All sensilla (except for the center sensillum) receive a dual innervation: 2 mechanoreceptive dendrites which terminate in the socket membrane plus several chemoreceptive dendrites (4–12) which enter the lumen. The thick-walled cuticular shaft possesses 2–3 small pore openings (100 Å) below the tip, thus establishing communication between dendrites and environment. Two structurally different types of palpal sensilla exist: The A-type has a characteristic doublelumen and always contains 4 dendrites, the B-type features a single lumen and a specially layered cuticular shaft with 6–12 dendrites. The fine structure of the tick palpal receptors corresponds closely to that of known contact chemoreceptors in insects.This research was supported in part by a contract with the Office of Naval Research (R. C. Axtell, principal investigator), and by NIH Training grant ES 00069. Paper no. 3700 of the Journal Series of the North Carolina State University Agricultural Experiment Station, Raleigh.  相似文献   

12.
A hierarchial population genetic study was conducted on 703 individual Amblyomma americanum from nine populations in Georgia, U.S.A. Populations were sampled from the Coastal Plain, midland Piedmont region, and the upper Piedmont region. Twenty-nine distinct haplotypes were found. A minimum spanning tree was constructed that indicated these haplotypes comprised two lineages, the root of which was distinctly star-like. The majority of the variation found was among ticks within each population, indicating high amounts of gene flow and little genetic differentiation between the three regions. An overall F(ST) value of 0.006 supported the lack of genetic structuring between collection sites in Georgia. Mantel regression analysis revealed no isolation by distance. Signatures of population expansion were detected in the shapes of the mismatch distribution and tests of neutrality. The absence of genetic differentiation combined with the rejection of the null model of isolation by distance may indicate recent range expansion in Georgia or insufficient time to reach an equilibrium where genetic drift may have affected allele frequencies. Alternatively, the high degree of panmixia found within A. americanum in Georgia may be due to bird-mediated dispersal of ticks increasing the genetic similarity between geographically separated populations.  相似文献   

13.
The population density of host-searching nymphal and adult lone star ticks, Amblyomma americanum (L.) (Acari: Ixodidae), was determined at the Robinson tract of the Kansas Ecological Reserves and a private farm 5 km north-west of the Robinson tract using standard drag cloth methods. Nymphs, males and females were counted and collected weekly from shaded habitats and adjacent sunlit habitats from mid-May through late July, 2003. Of the 1598 nymphs and 549 males collected by drag sampling, 74.0% and 72.1%, respectively, were collected from shaded sections of the habitats, whereas 77.3% of 472 females were found in sunlit sections. A. americanum collected during each sampling period were maintained unfed at >95% relative humidity and a 14 : 10 h photoperiod, and survival was recorded weekly until all ticks had died. Survival of nymphs, males and females did not differ between ticks collected in the shade vs. those collected in the sun. Nymphs survived significantly longer than adults, whereas male and female survival did not differ from each other. These results suggest that host-searching A. americanum populations may partition their environment to increase the chances of coming into contact with a potential vertebrate host.  相似文献   

14.
A Coxiella-type microbe occurs at 100% frequency in all Amblyomma americanum ticks thus far tested. Using laboratory-reared ticks free of other microbes, we identified the Amblyomma-associated Coxiella microbe in several types of tissue and at various stages of the life cycle of A. americanum by 16S rRNA gene sequencing and diagnostic PCR. We visualized Amblyomma-associated Coxiella through the use of a diagnostic fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) assay supplemented with PCR-based detection, nucleic acid fluorescent staining, wide-field epifluorescence and confocal microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Specific fluorescent foci were observed in several tick tissues, including the midgut and the Malpighian tubules, but particularly bright signals were observed in the granular acini of salivary gland clusters and in both small and large oocytes. TEM confirmed intracellular bacterial structures in the same tissues. The presence of Amblyomma-associated Coxiella within oocytes is consistent with the vertical transmission of these endosymbionts. Further, the presence of the Amblyomma-associated Coxiella symbiont in other tissues such as salivary glands could potentially lead to interactions with horizontally acquired pathogens.  相似文献   

15.
To determine whether there is a correlation between the amount of lipids on the surface of ticks and their permeability to water, we quantified cuticular surface wax and measured water-loss rates in the ixodid tick Amblyomma americanum from nonfed nymph to egg-laying female. Ticks deposited no extra cuticular lipids during feeding, permitting maximum transpiratory water loss that presumably helps to concentrate the bloodmeal; and ticks deposited additional cuticular wax after apolysis that reduced integumental water loss, which likely prepares ticks for off-host existence. A remarkable three-fold boost in surface wax deposition and extreme water retention were noted after host drop-off following feeding. This wax is likely host-derived. Fed nymphs could discriminate between low and high relative humidity, enabling pharate adults to conserve lipid that would otherwise be lost with the exuvia and feces. This conservation strategy likely adds to the lipid pool needed by the tick to survive in a dry environment and complements the tick's behavioral abilities for seeking out optimum conditions for water conservation and host location.  相似文献   

16.
Foelix RF 《Tissue & cell》1972,4(1):129-135
Ticks were submerged in silver-protein solution, prior to fixation for electron microscopy, in order to trace the pathway of molecules in supposed tarsal chemoreceptors. Sensilla with radially arranged cuticular canals (100-200 A in diameter) leading to the centrally located dendrites show silver granules inside the canals and in the central lumen, thus directly making contact with the dendrites. Sensilla with large, plugged pores (1200 A) exhibit an accumulation of silver granules in the pore openings but no granules (about 50 A in diameter) were observed penetrating into the lumen. Apparently silver granules could diffuse in, but not through the material which suspends the pore plugs. It is suggested that this material corresponds to the 'pore tubules' in insect olfactory sensilla and that it may play an essential role in transmitting a chemical stimulus from the environment to the dendrites.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Female Amblyomma hebraeum ticks (Acari: Ixodidae) increase their weight ∼10-fold during a ‘slow phase of engorgement’ (7–9 days), and a further 10-fold during the ‘rapid phase’ (12–24 h). During the rapid phase, the cuticle thins by half, with a plastic (permanent) deformation of greater than 40% in two orthogonal directions. A stress of 2.5 MPa or higher is required to achieve this degree of deformation (Flynn and Kaufman, 2015). Using a dimensional analysis of the tick body and applying the Laplace equation, we calculated that the tick must achieve high internal hydrostatic pressures in order to engorge fully: greater than 55 kPa at a fed:unfed mass ratio of ∼20:1, when cuticle thinning commences (Flynn and Kaufman, 2011). In this study we used a telemetric pressure transducer system to measure the internal hydrostatic pressure of ticks during feeding. Sustained periods of irregular high frequency (>20 Hz) pulsatile bursts of high pressure (>55 kPa) were observed in two ticks: they had been cannulated just prior to the rapid phase of engorgement, and given access to a host rabbit for completion of the feeding cycle. The pattern of periods of high pressure generation varied over the feeding cycle and between the two specimens. We believe that these pressures exceed those reported so far for any other animal.  相似文献   

19.
The fine structure of the paired foveae dorsales and foveal glands in the unfed female Amblyomma americanum is described and compared with that in other tick species. Each fovea opens to the exterior via pores which lead internally into a single cuticular tube, the pore-tube. This is surrounded by 2–3 epithelial cells. The pore-tube enlarges basally forming a large cavity possessing a cup-shaped cytoplasmic protrusion. The pore-tube cuticular lining extends downward to form an electron-dense, flaplike protrusion bracketing narrow cytoplasmic extensions filled with microtubules. These extensions form a previously undescribed valvelike structure that seems to control the flow of pheromone secretion from the foveal gland to the pore-tube. The single foveal gland lying beneath each pore-tube is composed of 2–3 inner, large, storage cells surrounded by outer, spindle-shaped cells; both types of cells have a characteristic feature of epithelia involved in secretory activity and ion transport. The outer cells extend upward to join the base of the poretube cells by septate desmosomes. A nerve, the foveal nerve, containing axons with neurosecretory vesicles occurs in the vicinity of the foveal gland. The secretory activity of the pheromone glands seems to be partially, if not entirely, under a neural regulation.  相似文献   

20.
Localization of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate (cyclic AMP) in alveoli of salivary glands of female Amblyomma americanum (L.) was accomplished with an indirect immunofluorescent technique. Little cyclic AMP fluorescence was seen in Type I alveoli in glands of unfed females but considerable fluorescence was seen in Type I alveoli of glands obtained from females that had fed. The most intense cyclic AMP fluorescence was observed in complex granular cells of Type II and III alveoli in glands of unfed females and glands from females in early stages of tick feeding. In the latter stages of tick feeding an increase in fluorescence in Type III alveoli was observed in cells near the lumen, possibly adluminal interstitial or transformed granular cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号