The organization of the muscle system of the causative agent of dicrocoeliosis,Dicrocoelium dendriticum |
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Authors: | Natalia V. Mochalova Nadezhda B. Terenina Sergei O. Movsesyan Natalia D. Kreshchenko |
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Affiliation: | 1. Center of Parasitology, А.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia;2. Center of Parasitology, А.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia Institute of Zoology of Scientific Center for Zoology and Hydroecology, National Academy of Sciences of Republic of Armenia, Yerevan, Armenia;3. Institute of Cell Biophysics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushchino, Moscow Region, Russia |
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Abstract: | The musculature of parasitic flatworms plays a central role in locomotory movement, attachment to the host, and in the function of the digestive, reproductive, and excretory systems. We examine for the first time the muscle system of the flatworm Dicrocoelium dendriticum, a causative agent of the parasitic disease dicrocoeliosis, by use of fluorescently labeled phalloidin and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Somatic musculature of D. dendriticum consists of the circular, longitudinal, and diagonal muscles. The distribution of the muscle fibers in the body wall differed among the anterior, middle, and posterior body regions of the worm. The musculature of the attachment organs, the oral and ventral suckers, includes several types of muscles: the external equatorial and meridional muscles, internal circular and semicircular muscles, and radial muscles. Inside of the ventral sucker the diagonally located muscles were revealed and the supplementary u-shaped muscles were found adjoined to the base of the sucker from outside. The musculature of the internal organs composed of the excretory, reproductive, and digestive systems were characterized. Our results increase our knowledge of the morphology of trematodes and the arrangement of their muscle system. |
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Keywords: | attachment organs confocal laser scanning microscopy histochemistry Platyhelminthes Trematoda |
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