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Morphology and taxonomy of the microsporidium Liebermannia covasacrae n. sp. from the grasshopper Covasacris pallidinota (Orthoptera, Acrididae)
Authors:Yuliya Y Sokolova  Carlos E Lange  James R Fuxa
Institution:a Laboratory of Insect Pathology, Department of Entomology, Louisiana State University, 404 Life Sciences Bldg., Baton Rouge, LA 70803-1710, USA
b Institute of Cytology, Department of Cytology of Unicellular Organisms, Russian Academy of Sciences, 4 Tikhoretsky Ave., 194064 St. Petersburg, Russia
c Comisión de Investigaciones Científicas (CIC) de la Provincia de Buenos Aires, Centro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores (CEPAVE), CCT La Plata CONICET - UNLP, Calle 2 # 584, La Plata (1900), Argentina
d Centro de Estudios Parasitológicos y de Vectores (CEPAVE), CCT La Plata CONICET - UNLP, Calle 2 # 584, La Plata (1900), Argentina
Abstract:During a survey for grasshopper pathogens in Argentina in 2005-2006, individual Covasacris pallidinota from halophylous grasslands in Laprida, Buenos Aires province were found to be infected with a microsporidium. Infection was restricted to the salivary gland epithelial cells. The microsporidium produced ovocylindrical spores averaging 2.6 ± 0.28 × 1.4 ± 0.12 μm (range 2.2-3.4 × 1.1-1.7 μm), which resembled in size and shape the spores of Liebermannia patagonica and L. dichroplusae, two recently described species that also parasitize Argentine grasshoppers. The life cycle of the microsporidium included the formation of polynucleate, diplokaryotic, moniliform, merogonial plasmodia wrapped in flattened cisterns of the host endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Plasmodia divided to produce diplokaryotic cells. The latter underwent elongation, dissociation of diplokarya counterparts, vacuolization, dismantling of the host ER envelope, and deposition of electron-dense material outside the plasma membrane. The resultant binucleate sporogonial plasmodia divided into two uninucleate sporoblasts, which eventually transformed into spores. Uninucleate spores contained a lamellar polaroplast, embraced by an elongated polar sac, anchoring disc, 3-5 polar filament coils, and a cluster of anastomizing tubules (sporoblast trans-Golgi, posterosome) at the posterior end. Sequence similarity of the SSU rDNA of the newly discovered microsporidium (Genbank accession no. EU709818) to L. patagonica and L. dichroplusae was 99% and 97%, respectively, suggesting that the three species belong to one genus. All three species fell into one clade in SSU rDNA-based phylogenetic trees produced by neighbor joining, maximum parsimony, and maximum likelihood analyses with 100% statistical support. We assign the name Liebermannia covasacrae to this microsporidium. It can be easily differentiated from both congeners by host species, tissue tropism, type of sporogony, and several features of morphology. Comparison of the three Liebermannia spp. demonstrates that the nuclear phase (dikaryotic versus monokaryotic spores) and type of sporogony (polysporous versus disporous) may vary in closely related species.
Keywords:Acrididae  Argentina  Grasshopper  Covasacris pallidinota  Liebermannia  Microsporidia  Molecular taxonomy  Orthoptera  Ultrastructure
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