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Ultrastructural pathology of the epidermis of molting elaterid larvae (Coleoptera) with a fungus and a bacterium in the ecdysial space
Authors:RY Zacharuk
Institution:Biology Department, University of Saskatchewan Regina Campus, Regina, Saskatchewan, S4S 0A2 Canada
Abstract:Toxins produced by the fungus Metarrhizium anisopliae and the bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the ecdysial space of a molting wireworm are absorbed through the thin new cuticle and ultrastructurally change the epidermal cells into two distinct types. One is a rounded, degenerative type characterized by a “light” cytoplasm with vesiculated rough endoplasmic reticulum, rounded mitochondria with degenerated cristae, little ground plasm, and a rounded nucleus with little nucleoplasm and large globules of condensed chromatin from which chromatin fibrils separate in loose folds or granulelike tight folds. The other type has very irregular outlines and is characterized by a “dark” cytoplasm with abundant, whorled laminae of rough endoplasmic reticulum and abundant free ribosomes in a dense ground plasm, large rounded clear vacuoles, and apparently normal mitochondria and nuclei. The fungal toxins are believed to be primarily responsible for the formation of the light cells, and the bacterial toxins, for the separation of the chromatin into fibrils in the light cells, the fusion of their nuclei into large nuclear bodies, and the changes in the cytoplasmic contents of the dark cells. The dark cells, although abnormal, appear to retain a limited secretory activity.
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