Adhesion of Plasmodium gallinaceum Ookinetes to the Aedes aegypti Midgut: Sites of Parasite Attachment and Morphological Changes in the Ookinete |
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Authors: | Helge Zieler Claude F. Garon Elizabeth R. Fischer Mohammed Shahabuddin |
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Affiliation: | Medical Entomology Section, Laboratory of Parasitic Diseases, National institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health. Bethesda, MD 20892-0425;Microscopy Branch, Rocky Mountain Laboratories. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. National Institutes of Health. Hamilton. MT 59840 |
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Abstract: | Plasmodium gallinaceum ookinetes adhered to Aedes aegypti midgut epithelia when purified ookinetes and isolated midguts were combined in vitro. Ookinetes preferentially bound to the microvillated luminal surface of the midgut, and they seemed to interact with three types of structures on the midgut surface. First, they adhered lo and migrated through a network-like matrix, which we have termed microvilli-associated network, that covers the surface of the microvilli. This network forms on the luminal midgut surface in response to blood or protein meals. Second, the ookinetes bound directly to the microvilli on the surface of the midgut and were occasionally found immersed in the thick microvillar layer. Third, the ookinetes associated with accumulations of vesicular structures found interspersed between the microvillated cells of the midgut. The origin of these vesicular structures is unknown, but they correlated with the surface of midgut cells invaded by ookinetes as observed by TEM. After binding to the midgut. ookinetes underwent extensive morphological changes: they frequently developed one or more annular constrictions, and their surface roughened considerably, suggesting that midgut components remain bound to the parasite surface. Our observations suggest that, in a natural infection, the ookinete interacts in a sequential manner with specific components of the midgut surface. Initial binding to the midgut surface may activate the ookinete and cause morphological changes in preparation for invasion of the midgut cells. |
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Keywords: | Microvilli-associated network peritrophic membrane scanning electron microscopy transmission electron microscopy. |
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