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1.
The fine structure of the epimastigotes of Trypanosoma cyclops maintained in blood agar medium at 25 C is described. This organism was isolated from the Malaysian primates Macaca nemestrina and Macaca ira. A distinctive feature of T. cyclops is that it is pigmented when grown in the presence of hemoglobin. The pigment bodies apparently lack a substructure and are electron dense even in unstained sections. Most of the pigment is located posterior to the kinetoplast region but some is found adjacent and anterior to the kinetoplast. Cells from control cultures grown in medium lacking hemoglobin did not possess this type of pigment body. Similarly, pigment was not found in cells of an Indonesian trypanosome grown in medium containing hemoglobin. The cytoplasm of T. cyclops is bounded by a unit membrane which is specialized where it makes contact with the flagellum. A cytostome extends from the region of the flagellar pocket. The kinetoplast and nucleus are immediately posterior to the base of the flagellum. Transverse sections in the region of the flagellar pocket and flagellar base often reveal a group of 3 microtubules which are distinct from the pellicular microtubules.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus of aPleurochrysis, a coccolithophorid was studied in detail. Three major fibrous connecting bands and several accessory fibrous bands link the basal bodies, haptonema and microtubular flagellar roots. The asymmetrical flagellar root system is composed of three different microtubular roots (referred to here as roots 1,2, and 3) and a fibrous root. Root 1, associated with one of the basal bodies, is of the compound type, constructed of two sets of microtubules,viz. a broad sheet consisting of up to twenty closely aligned microtubules, and a secondary bundle made up of 100–200 microtubules which arises at right angles to the former. A thin electron-dense plate occurs on the surface of the microtubular sheet opposite the secondary bundle. The fibrous root arises from the same basal body and passes along the plasmalemma together with the microtubular sheet of root 1. Root 2 is also of the compound type and arises from one of the major connecting bands (called a distal band) as a four-stranded microtubular root and extends in the opposite direction to the haptonema. From this stranded root a secondary bundle of microtubules arises at approximately right angle. Root 3 is a more simple type, composed of at least six microtubules which are associated with the basal body. The flagellar transition region was found to be unusual for the classPrymnesiophyceae. The phylogenetic significance of the flagellar apparatus in thePrymnesiophyceae is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
SYNOPSIS. The fine structure of 2 isolates of Trypanosoma congolense maintained in laboratory rodents has been studied from thin sections of osmium- and aldehyde-fixed flagellates. The pellicular complex, nucleus, and flagellar apparatus are all similar to those of other African trypanosomes. Aberrant intracellular differentiation of the flagellum is occasionally found. As in bloodstream forms of other salivarian trypanosomes the single mitochondrion forms an irregular canal running from one end of the body to the other, with a shallow bowl-shaped expansion forming a capsule for the fibrous kinetoplast (mitochondrial DNA). A connexion between the mitochondrial envelope of the kinetoplast and the basal body of the flagellum is not evident, and sometimes the flagellum base is not even apposed to the kinetoplast but lies behind it. Tubular cristae are present in the mitochondrial canal and, by light microscopy, this structure gives a positive reaction for NAD diaphorase suggesting at least some activity in electron transport, even tho at this stage in its life cycle respiration is doubtfully sensitive to cyanide and cytochrome pigments are in all probability absent. The region of the cytoplasm between the nucleus and the flagellar pocket has all the trappings associated with secretory cells in higher animals, or with the secretion of surface structures in phytoflagellates. just behind the nucleus a limb of granular reticulum subtends a Colgi stack of flattened saccules with attendant vesicles. Close to the distal pole of the Golgi complex is a network of smooth-membraned cisternae, termed here the agranular or secretory reticulum, which undergoes localized swelling with the accumulation of a secretory product to form large spherical sacs or vacuoles. These network-linked vacuoles probably correspond to the post nuclear vacuole complex visible by light microscopy. From its apparent secretory function this complex is regarded here as being possibly an extension or derivative of the Golgi complex, the smooth-membraned tubules lying alongside the 2 structures possibly representing a link between them. By analogy with phytoflagellates and the secretory cells of higher animals, it is suggested that the secretion is transported for discharge into the flagellar pocket by way of multivesicular bodies and smooth-walled tubules or vesicles. Spiny pits in the wall of the flagellar pocket, and similar-sized vesicles in the nearby cytoplasm, could be stages in either exocytosis of secretion or endocytosis (pinocytosis). It is tentatively suggested that the secretion may be the material from which the surface coat is formed. Neither a cytostome nor a contractile vacuole has been observed in T. congolense.  相似文献   

4.
Ultrastructure of both undifferentiated (promastigote and paramastigote) and differentiated (opisthomastigote) forms of Herpetomonas megaseliae is described. There is a posterior migration of the kinetoplast at the end of the exponential growth phase. The posterior extension of the flagellar pocket precedes migration of the kinetoplast. Opisthomastigotes have an electron-translucent mitochondrial matrix in comparison with undifferentiated forms. The Golgi body changes from a stack of flattened sacs to an aggregation of vesicles. Several structures previously reported from Trypanosomatidae, e.g. subpellicular organelles, pellicular microtubules, membrane whorls, stored metabolic products, surface blebs, and an intraflagellar body are also present in H. megaseliae.  相似文献   

5.
The freshwater green euglenoid Euglena anabaena var. minor has a pellicle with groove‐ridge articulation, a chloroplast with pyrenoids doubly sheathed by two paramylon caps, and a nucleus with permanently condensed chromosomes and nucleolus. The flagellar apparatus basically resembles that of Euglena. The dorsal root (DR) originates at the dorsal basal body of the emergent flagellum, while both the intermediate root (IR) and ventral root (VR) originate at the ventral basal body of the non‐emergent flagellum. The cytoplasmic pocket is associated with the ventral root/ reinforcing microtubular band. However, ultrastructural characterization of E. anabaena var. minor shows the pocket to consist of five to seven microtubules, and flagellar roots with microtubule configuration of 3–4–6 in the DR‐IR‐VR. The dorsal band microtubules pair at the reservoir‐canal transition level. The doublet microtubules are formed into triplets and doublets at the lower canal level and then make pellicular microtubules at the upper canal level.  相似文献   

6.
The flagellar apparatus of the marine dinoflagellate Amphidinium rhynchocephalum Anissimowa was examined using the techniques of rapid freezing/freeze substitution and serial thin section three dimensional reconstruction. The flagellar apparatus is composed of two basal bodies that are offset from one another and lie at an angle of approximately 150° The transverse basal body is associated with two individual microtubules that extend from the proximal end of the basal body toward the flagellar opening. One of these microtubules is closely appressed to a striated fibrous root that also extends from the proximal base of the transverse basal body. The longitudinal basal body is associated with a nine member microtubular root that extends from the proximal end of the basal body toward the posterior of the cell. The longitudinal microtubular root and the transverse striated fiber are connected by a striated connective fiber. In addition to the microtubules associated with the transverse and longitudinal basal bodies, a group of microtubules originates adjacent to one of the transverse flagellar roots and extends into the cytoplasm. Vesicular channels extend from the flagellar openings to the region of the basal bodies where they expand to encompass the various connective structures of the flagellar apparatus. The possible function and evolutionary importance of these structures is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
SYNOPSIS. Cryptobia vaginalis (Hesse 1910) occurs as long thin and short broad forms in the vagina of the gnathobdelliform leeches Haemopis sanguisuga (Linnaeus) and Hirudo medicinalis Linnaeus. Cytochemical staining for DNA and transmission electron microscopy of sectioned material indicate that in the thin forms the kinetoplast DNA (kDNA) is dispersed irregularly through the mitochondrial network ( pankinetoplastic condition) rather than concentrated in the adbasal region of the mitochondrion ( eukinetoplastic condition) as in trypanosomatids and most other kinetoplastid flagellates. Light-microscopic studies on the rare broad forms, however, suggest that these have conventional adbasal location of the kinetoplast. Binary fission appears to occur in the thin forms, suggesting that the dispersed kinetoplast is either highly polyenergid or lacks a genetic function. In other features of its microanatomy, C. vaginalis is a conventional kinetoplastid. The flagellate has an incomplete corset of pellicular microtubules which may have a role in the cortical contractility characteristic of the genus Cryptobia . Feeding is by pinocytosis of vaginal colloids through a microtubule-lined cytopharynx, possibly after binding to a prominent filament-coated preoral ridge. A pulsatile (contractile) vacuole is present and appears to be responsible for defecation as well as osmoregulation. Some individuals have elongate bacterial epibionts attached to the body in parallel with the cortical microtubules. All individuals have 2–8 spheroplast-like endobiotic bacteria in the prenuclear cytoplasm.  相似文献   

8.
The biflagellate zoospores ofProtoderma sarcinoidea and the quadriflagellate zoospores ofChamaetrichon capsulatum are each covered by an amorphous, mucous material and a single layer of square scales, and the pyrenoid matrix is traversed by one or more thylakoid membranes. In the flagellar apparatus the basal bodies ofP. sarcinoidea and the upper basal bodies ofC. capsulatum are displaced in the counterclockwise absolute orientation, while the lower basal bodies ofC. capsulatum are directly opposed. Other components of the flagellar apparatus observed in each alga include: cruciately arranged d and s rootlets, each associated with an electron-dense component; simple terminal caps comprised of large and small subunits; a terminal electron-dense mass located near the proximal end of each basal body inP. sarcinoidea and near the upper basal bodies inC. capsulatum; and two rhizoplasts. Components specific to one or the other species include a single accessory basal body inP. sarcinoidea and a fibrous, electron-opaque band that links the upper and the lower basal bodies inC. capsulatum. The flagellar apparatus architecture ofP. sarcinoidea resemblesGayralia oxysperma, while that ofC. capsulatum is similar toTrichosarcina polymorphum andUlothrix species, all of which are included in theUlothrix-group,Ulotrichales, Ulvophyceae.  相似文献   

9.
The first flagellum of Hibberdia magna comb. nov. bears mastigonemes that have both short and long lateral filaments attached to the tubular shaft. The second flagellum is very short (ca. 850 nm) and is directed posteriorly approximately 160° from the first flagellum. Three microtubular flagellar roots (R1, R2 and R4) and a rhizoplast (= striated root) are present. The R1 root consists of four microtubules that arise near the right surface of the first flagellum basal body; the R1 root extends to the dorsal side of the cell and then curves back along the left side of the cell. Cytoskeletal microtubules are nucleated from the R1 root including one loose cluster of cytoskeletal microtubules that extends down the left side of the cell adjacent to the contractile vacuole. The R2 root is a single microtubule that arises along the left surface of the first flagellum basal body and extends to the left side of the cell. The R4 root consists of three microtubules that arise along the left side of the second flagellum basal body. A helical band wraps around two microtubules at the proximal end of the R4 root. Two of the three R4 root microtubules extend along the left side of the second flagellum, curve around to the right side of that flagellum and terminate. No R3 root was found. The orientation of the basal bodies of Hibberdia gen. nov. is similar to that of the Xanthophyceae and Oomycetes. There are apparent homologies in the R1, R2 and R4 roots of Hibberdia and these and other protists, but only Hibberdia lacks a R3 root. Three long flagella are present in preprophase but later one is endocytosized and the axoneme extends to the posterior of the cell. During metaphase the nuclear envelope is more or less intact except at the poles; the flagellar apparatuses are at the poles and the spindle microtubules originate near the basal bodies. Two stages are known in the life history: 1) a capsoidlike state with non-swimming flagellate cells inside a colonial gel, and 2) a free-swimming single-celled monad state. Vegetative cell division occurs in both stages. The flagellar apparatus, the cell division process and the life history combined with the previously described unique light-harvesting antheraxanthin make H. magna distinct from other algae. A new genus, Hibberdia gen. nov., a new family, Hibberdiaceae fam. nov. and a new order, Hibberdiales, ord. nov. are described.  相似文献   

10.
The flagellar apparatus and reservoir cytoskeleton of Cryptoglena pigra Ehrenberg are described. Three flagellar roots are associated with the two basal bodies. The four-membered dorsal root arises from the dorsal basal body and extends anteriorly following the reservoir membrane. At the base of the reservoir the dorsal root nucleates a large microtubular group termed the dorsal band. The dorsal band continues anteriorlhy between the reservoir and eyespot and is continuous with the microtubules of the canal and ultimately the pellicle. The ventral basal body is associated with two roots. The four-membered intermediate root proceeds anteriorly and extends the length of the reservoir. The seven-to eight-membered ventral root projects anteriorly along the reservoir membrane and bends away from the reservoir. At this point, the microtubules of the ventral root line a cytoplasmic pocket and are termed the MTR (reinforcing microtubules). The canal region is composed of longitudinal microtubules surrounded by two semicircles of microtubles. Ultimately, the fifteen ridges of the canal give rise to the pellicular ridges.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Trypanosoma brucei, a unicellular parasite, contains several single-copied organelles that duplicate and segregate in a highly coordinated fashion during the cell cycle. In the procyclic stage, a bi-lobed structure is found adjacent to the single ER exit site and Golgi apparatus, forming both stable and dynamic association with other cytoskeletal components including the basal bodies that seed the flagellum and the flagellar pocket collar that is critical for flagellar pocket biogenesis. To further understand the bi-lobe and its association with adjacent organelles, we performed proteomic analyses on the immunoisolated bi-lobe complex. Candidate proteins were localized to the flagellar pocket, the basal bodies, a tripartite attachment complex linking the basal bodies to the kinetoplast, and a segment of microtubule quartet linking the flagellar pocket collar and bi-lobe to the basal bodies. These results supported an extensive connection among the single-copied organelles in T. brucei, a strategy employed by the parasite for orderly organelle assembly and inheritance during the cell cycle.  相似文献   

13.
Intra- and extracellular gametocytes of Haemogregarina sp. from Rana berlandieri were studied by light and electron microscopy. Locomotion in free gametocytes appears to be related to series of horizontal “peristaltic” waves of constriction, passing from anterior to posterior along the body. Intracellular gametocytes lie within a vacuole in the erythrocyte cytoplasm. The pellicle of the parasite consists of a trilaminar plasmalemma and an inner electron dense layer, beneath which lies a ring of 80 microtubules. The inner dense layer becomes thickened and modified in the apical region, to form a cap-like structure. The gametocytes contain a prominent nucleus, several mitochondria, and many granular inclusions. One type of inclusion consists of elliptical, electron-dense, profeinaceous bodies scattered throughout the cytoplasm, while other inclusions are larger and electron-opaque, polysaccharide in nature, and occur predominantly in the pre- and post-nuclear regions. In the electron microscope, pronounced pellicular folds were observed in longitudinally sectioned extracellular gametocytes. These folds are thought to represent the waves of constriction seen in motile specimens by light microscopy. The mechanism of movement of the parasite is discussed and compared with that in haemosporidian ookinetes, as well as in gregarines.  相似文献   

14.
The flagellar apparatus in male gametes of the siphonaceous green alga, Bryopsis maxima Okamura, was studied and compared with that of other green biflagellate cells. The proximal portions of two basal bodies are connected by a single striated proximal band, unique among the biflagellate reproductive cells of green algae studied. Anterior to the flagellar bases is a pair of distal bands different from the single structure in other biflagellate cells. These bands which arise from the distal portion of each basal body, extend upward in the papilla and curve down toward the lower edges of the basal bodies. They seem to have no direct association with each other. Two pairs of distinct flagellar roots, one consisting of 3–5 microtubules and the other of a partially striated fiber of undetermined numbers of microtubules, diverge from the basal body region and extend towards the cell posterior. Their component microtubules are disorganized into single or smaller groups midway over the cell length. The uniqueness of the flagellar apparatus is briefly discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The flagellar root system of Entosiphon sulcatum (Dujardin) Stein (Euglenophyceae) is described and compared with kinetoplastid and other euglenoid systems. An asymmetric pattern of three microtubular roots, one between the two flagellar basal bodies and one on either side (here called the intermediate, dorsal, and ventral roots), is consistent within the euglenoid flagellates studied thus far. The dorsal root is associated with the basal body of the anterior flagellum (F1) and lies on the left dorsal side of the basal body complex. Originating between the two flagellar basal bodies, and associated with the basal body of the trailing flagellum (F2), the intermediate root is morphologically distinguished by fibrils interconnecting the individual microtubules to one another and to the overlying reservoir membrane. The intermediate root is often borne on a ridge projecting into the reservoir. The ventral root originates near the F2 basal body and lies on the right ventral side of the cell. Fibrillar connections link the membrane of F2 with the reservoir membrane at the reservoir-canal transition level. A large cross-banded fiber joins the two flagellar basal bodies, and a series of smaller striated fibers links the anterior accessory and flagellar basal bodies. Large nonstriated fibers extend from the basal body complex posteriorly into the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Immunofluorescence microscopy, conventional and high voltage transmission electron microscopy were used to describe changes in the flagellar apparatus during cell division in the motile, coccolithbearing cells ofPleurochrysis carterae (Braarud and Fagerlund) Christensen. New basal bodies appear alongside the parental basal bodies before mitosis and at prophase the large microtubular (crystalline) roots disassemble as their component microtubules migrate to the future spindle poles. By prometaphase the crystalline roots have disappeared; the flagellar axonemes shorten and the two pairs of basal bodies (each consisting of one parental and one daughter basal body) separate so that each pair is distal to a spindle pole. By late prometaphase the pairs of basal bodies bear diminutive flagellar roots for the future daughter cells. The long flagellum of each daughter cell is derived from the parental basal bodies; thus, the basal body that produces a short flagellum in the parent produces a long flagellum in the daughter cell. We conclude that each basal body in these cells is inherently identical but that a first generation basal body generates a short flagellum and in succeeding generations it produces a long flagellum. At metaphase a fibrous band connecting the basal bodies appears and the roots and basal bodies reorient to their interphase configuration. By telophase the crystalline roots have begun to reform and the rootlet microtubules have assumed their interphase appearance by early cytokinesis.Abbreviations CR1, CR2 crystalline roots 1 and 2 - CT cytoplasmic tongue microtubules - DIC differential interference contrast light microscopy - H haptonema - HVEM high voltage transmission electron microscopy - IMF immunofluorescence microscopy - L left flagellum/basal body - M metaphase plate - MT microtubule - N nucleus - R right flagellum/basal body - R1, R2, R3 roots 1, 2, and 3 - TEM transmission electron microscopy  相似文献   

17.
Quadriflagellate zoospores ofChaetophora incrassata andPseudoschizomeris caudata have similar features including an appressed membrane between the pyrenoid matrix and the starch sheath, and identical flagellar apparatuses. Components of the flagellar apparatus include: directly opposed upper basal bodies, lower basal bodies in the clockwise absolute orientation, a grooved distal fiber, peripheral and terminal fibers between adjacent basal bodies, proximal fibers connecting the lower basal bodies to the X-membered rootlets two- and X-membered rootlets associated with electron-dense components, and at least one rhizoplast. The X-membered rootlets, are comprised of five microtubules inC. incrassata and four or five inP. caudata. These features of the flagellar apparatus suggest that the two algae are closely related, and together withStigeoclonium, Uronema, Draparnaldia andFritschiella, form a natural group, the Chaetophoraceae, Chaetophorales (sensu Mattox and Stewart).  相似文献   

18.
The chlorococcalean algae Dictyochloris fragrans and Bracteacoccus sp. produce naked zoospores with two unequal flagella and parallel basal bodies. Ultrastructural features of the flagellar apparatus of these zoospores are basically identical and include a banded distal fiber, two proximal fibers, and four cruciately arranged microtubular rootlets with only one microtubule in each dexter rootlet. In D. fragrans, each proximal fiber is composed of two subfibers, one striated and one nonstriated, and each sinister rootlet is composed of five microtubules (4/1), decreasing to four away from the basal bodies. In Bracteacoccus sp., each proximal fiber is a single unit, the sinister rootlets are four (3/1) or rarely five (4/1) microtubules, and each basal body is associated with an unusual curved structure. The basic features of the flagellar apparatus of the zoospores of these two algae resemble those of Heterochlamydomonas rather than most other chlorococcalean algae that have equal length flagella, basal bodies in the V-shape arrangement, and clockwise absolute orientation. It is proposed that these algae with unequal flagella and parallel basal bodies have a shared common ancestry within the green algae.  相似文献   

19.
The major glucose transporter of the parasitic protozoan Leishmania enriettii exists in two isoforms, one of which (iso-1) localizes to the flagellar membrane, while the other (iso-2) localizes to the plasma membrane of the cell body, the pellicular membrane. These two isoforms differ only in their cytosolic NH2-terminal domains. Using immunoblots and immunofluorescence microscopy of detergent-extracted cytoskeletons, we have demonstrated that iso-2 associates with the microtubular cytoskeleton that underlies the cell body membrane, whereas the flagellar membrane isoform iso-1 does not associate with the cytoskeleton. Deletion mutants that remove the first 25 or more amino acids from iso-1 are retargeted from the flagellum to the pellicular membrane, suggesting that these deletions remove a signal required for flagellar targeting. Unlike the full-length iso-1 protein, these deletion mutants associate with the cytoskeleton. Our results suggest that cytoskeletal binding serves as an anchor to localize the iso-2 transporter within the pellicular membrane, and that the flagellar targeting signal of iso-1 diverts this transporter into the flagellar membrane and away from the pellicular microtubules.  相似文献   

20.
SYNOPSIS. Thin sections of the following stages of Trypanosoma avium were examined in the electron microscope: Trypomastigote forms from the blood of a bird, large epimastigote forms developing from the former after 2 hours in vitro, small epimastigote and metacyclic trypomastigote forms developing after longer periods of cultivation in vitro. The general structure of all stages was similar to that which is already well known for the genus, with the following points being of particular interest: (1) In the large trypomastigote and epimastigote forms, and possibly also in the smaller forms, the flagellar sheath was attached to the pellicle, at least in places. In the large trypomastigote forms, this resulted in the drawing out of a “fin” or ridge of cytoplasm, particularly in the mid-region of the body, to form a true undulating membrane. (2) At least some of the individuals in the blood of a bird have 2 basal bodies, one of which is aflagellate, altho these individuals rarely if ever divide. The large epimastigote forms into which they transform in vitro develop 4 basal bodies (2 flagellate and 2 aflagellate) before dividing. (3) The chondriome is well-developed in all stages, extending thruout the body, even to the tip of the elongated posterior end of the form in the avian host. (4) A short cytostome, leading from the flagellar pocket, was seen in the hematozoic (blood-inhabiting) trypomastigote form but not in other stages. (5) It is suggested that the forward movement of the kinetoplast and basal body during the transformation from trypomastigote to epimastigote form is mediated by localized cytoplasmic movement, resulting in the “rolling-up” of the organism's hind end. It is further suggested that protein synthesis is reduced or even suppressed entirely in the small epi- and trypomastigote forms appearing at the end of the developmental cycle in vitro or in the insect host, such synthesis recommencing rapidly after re-entry into the vertebrate.  相似文献   

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