The fine structure is described of a new nonphotosynthctic flagellate, named Desmomonas prorhynchi gen. et sp. n„ cndoparasitic in the lecilhoepilheliate turbellarian Prorhynchus sp. The flagellates surround cell masses enveloped by a protective wall, to which adhere many small, regularly arranged cylindroid bodies; these structures are reminiscent of epicuticular projections characterising the body walls of some oligochaetes and polychaetes. The cells of a cell mass arc joined to the enveloping wall by spot hemidesmosomes. Their cytoplasm contains Golgi systems, mitochondria, fibrillar dense bodies, paired centrioles, and rod-shaped bacteria. Certain cells possess four ccntrioles. Ü. prorhynchi bears two flagella, and is attached temporarily to a cell mass by an anterior process ending at a highly organised desmosome. The flagellate plasma membrane has a fuzzy coating. Hair-like plasmalcmmal extensions project from the base of the anterior process. A mitochondrial derivative containing dense spheres lies some distance from the flagellar basal bodies. There is no Golgi apparatus. Other cytoplasmic constituents of the flagellate morphology are vacuoles, and microneme-like bodies. The two flagella, similar and without paraxial rods, arise from a flagellar pocket; neither is recurrent. The new protist cannot at present be assigned to any existing zoomastigophorean order.
Development of a new myxozoan parasite Tetracapsula bryozoides gen. n. et sp. n. in the coelomic cavities of Cris-latella mucedo Cuvier is described. Uninucleate proliferative cells are formed within well-defined sacs, the wall of which is one cell thick. The sacs, of different sizes according to age, are free floating and are conspicuously moved about within the coelomic fluid by the ciliary movements of the host. Division of the proliferative cells produces spherical cells of different sizes with nuclei of commensurate size. The largest cells enter sporogony by dividing into ten cells. Four of these become capsulogenic cells arranged as an anterior group, each giving rise to a spherical polar capsule containing a polar filament, possibly without prior formation of an external tube or, at most, very transient formation of these. Four valvogenic cells enclose the two sporoplasms and overlie the capsulogenic cells except at the points of exit of the polar filaments from the polar capsules. The two uninucleate sporoplasms are packed with endoplasmic reticulum, numerous mitochondria with tubular cristae and sporoplasmosomes which are distributed peripherally. Both sporoplasms produce secondary cells. Typical myxosporean features of the wall cells of the sac and all stages within the sac are: nuclei with granular nucleoplasm and prominent nucleolus, gap junctions between cells consisting of thickened membranes with cross connections, and haplosporosomes. A new genus is established for the parasite, defined as having development limited to uninucleate pseudoplasmodia within a sac of parasite origin, each uninucleate sporogonie stage giving rise to one spore with tetraradial symmetry, composed of four shell valves, four anterior polar capsules and two uninucleate sporoplasms with secondary cells. No plasmodia are formed. The genus is placed within the order Multivalvuli-da, in a new family Saccosporidae, defined as having development within a sac of parasite origin and sporogony without external tube or microtubules during polar capsule formation.
Early development of the coccidium Sarcocystis muriviperae Matuschka, Heydom, Mehlhom, Abd-Al-Aal, Diesing et Bichler, 1987 is described from experimentally infected white mice fed sporocysts from naturally infected Vipera palaestinae and Coluber jugularis. Although the course of infection was similar, mice infected with the sporocysts from the first host survived an inoculum of up to 200,000 sporocysts, while others infected with the second, succumbed to inocula exceeding 40,000 sporocysts in 7-10 days post infection (p,i,). Histological and ultrastructural studies revealed merogony in the hepatocytes during days 7-10 p.i. and onset of sarcocyst development by days 19-21 p.i. The livers of infected mice are grossly enlarged and of a mottled whitish colour due to severe neutrophil inflammatory infiltration, apparently stimulated by host cell residues or from defunct disaggregating meronts at the end of the merogony cycle. Early sarcocysts undergo a further division by endopolygeny before proceeding to division by endodyogeny.
Two differently coloured strains of the genus Chroococcus were isolated from a cyanobacterial assemblage collected from the stony littoral of a backwater of the Danube River in southern Slovakia. When grown after isolation, both subcultures were similar morphologically and their growth parameters did not differ substantially, but their pigment content (PC: PE and carotenoid ratios), details in their morphology during their life cycles and slime production were different. Identical and different characters of both morphotypes remained stable during cultivation on both agarized and liquid media, even when the cultivation parameters were changed. Both of the subcultures were studied using electron microscopy and almost their complete 16S rRNA genes were sequenced, which showed that in terms of their genetic relationship there was a 96.4% sequence similarity and certain taxonomic interspecific differences between both subcultures were confirmed. The various chromatic modifications recorded in cyanobacteria and their ecological consequences are discussed. The results yielded further data on the changes that occur during the cyanobacterial differentiation processes and their genetic stabilization.
Kappaphycus alvarezii is a seaweed of great economic importance for the extraction of kappa carrageenan from its cell walls. The most common strains are dark red, brown, yellow, and different gradations of green. It is known that ultraviolet radiation (UVR) affects macroalgae in many important ways, including reduced growth rate, reduction of primary productivity, and changes in cell biology and ultrastructure. Therefore, we examined the brown strain of K. alvarezii exposed to ultraviolet-B radiaton (UVBR) for 3 h per day during 28 days of cultivation. The control plants showed growth rates of 7.27% d-1, while plants exposed to UVBR grew only 4.0% d-1. Significant differences in growth rates and in phycobiliproteins between control and exposed plants were also found. Compared with control plants, phycobiliprotein contents were observed to decrease after UV-B exposure. Furthermore, the chlorophyll a (Chl a) contents decreased and showed significant differences. UVBR also caused changes in the ultrastructure of cortical and subcortical cells, which included increased thickness of the cell wall and number of plastoglobuli, reduced intracellular spaces, changes in the cell contour, and destruction of chloroplast internal organization. Reaction with Toluidine Blue showed an increase in the thickness of the cell wall, and Periodic Acid-Schiff stain showed a decrease in the number of starch grains. By the significant changes in growth rates, photosynthetic contents and ultrastructual changes observed, it is clear that UVBR negatively affects intertidal macroalgae and, by extension, their economic viability. and É. C. Schmidt ... [et al.].
Effects of high-temperature stress (HTS) and PEG-induced water stress (WS), applied separately or in combination, on the functional activity and ultrastructure of the photosynthetic apparatus (PSA) of maize (Zea mays L.) and sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.) plants were investigated. In maize plant tissues WS provoked the decrease in RWC by 10.9 %, HTS by 7.0 %, and after simultaneous application of the both treatments the decrease was 32.7 % in comparison with control plants. Similar but more expressed changes were observed in sunflower plants. Sunflower was more sensitive to these stresses. Net photosynthetic rate decreased significantly after all treatments, more in sunflower. In mesophyll chloroplasts after separately applied WS and HTS the number of grana and thylakoids was reduced and electron-transparent spaces appeared. At combined stress (WS+HTS) granal and stromal thylakoids were considerably affected and chloroplast envelope in many of them was partially disrupted. and I. Dekov, T. Tsonev, I. Yordanov.
The egg shell of Huffmanela huffmani Moravec, 1987 forms three main layers: an outer vitelline layer, a middle chitinous layer, and an inner lipid layer. The vitelline layer, forming the superficial projections of the egg shell, comprises two parts: an outer electron-dense, and an inner electron-lucid part. The chitinous layer is differentiated into three parts: an outer homogenous electron-dense part, a lamellated part, and an inner electron-dense net-like part. The lipid layer comprises an outer net-like electron-lucid part, and an inner homogenous electron-lucid part. The polar plugs are formed by electron-lucid material with fine electron-dense fibrils.
The cytology of a new microsporean parasite Microsporidium epithelialis sp. n. from the intestinal epithelial cells of the freshwater oligochaete Tubifex sp. (Tubificidae) is described. The microsporean occurred together with an actinosporean of the genus Triactinomyxon, which was found between the epithelial cells. The merogonic and sporogonie stages (mature spores included) of the microsporean parasite are monokaryotic. An individual sporophorous vesicle surrounds each spore. The fixed and stained spore has an average dimension of 1.9-2.5 x 0.9-1.2 pm. The spores are oval with a characteristic surface layer, showing ornamentation-like projections, which are in close contact to the exosporc. A short polar filament forming three to four coils traverses the polaroplast with two lamellar layers. The ultrastructure and other characteristic features of this microsporean parasite are distinct from those of the microsporean species described so far from oligochaetes.
The fine structure is described of the merogonic stages and gametocytes of a Plasmodium tropiduri Aragão et Neiva, 1909-like parasite infecting the teiid lizard Kentropyx calcarata Spix from North Brazil. The trophozoites are bordered by two membranes, and with growth a pellicle is formed by the addition of an inner, thick double layer and fragmented membrane. The same type of inner membrane occurs in the pellicle of the merozoites differentiating from the meronts. Merozoites contained a large electron-dense body, sometimes seen to be embraced by a tubular mitochondrion with a dense matrix. Micro- and macrogametocytes are bounded by a double membrane, closely apposed by the detached wall of the parasitophorous vacuole. Both contain osmiophilic bodies. The microgametocyte contains an electron-dense aggregate, and the macrogametocyte has a large mitochondrion and a complex of tubuli and cisternae. These features are compared with those described in other malarial parasites.
Henneguya pilosa sp. n., a new species of myxosporean from the gill filaments of the white piranha, Serrasalmus altuvei Ramirez, 1965 (Characidae), a freshwater teleost fish collected in the Zoological Garden of the city of Teresina (Piauí), Brazil, is described from light and transmission electron microscope observations. This myxosporean produced small plasmodia (up to 0.2 mm in diameter), each one containing all life-cycle stages of the parasite, including numerous spores. The spores, laterally compressed, averaged 54.2 (52.3-56.0) µm in total length and consisted of two unequal valves adhering together along the suture line and two caudal processes. The spore body measured 21.1 (20.0-23.1) µm in length, 5.9 (5.5-6.3) µm in width, and 2.2 (1.9-2.6) µm in thickness. The two equal ellipsoidal polar capsules of 7.4 (7.1-7.6) µm long and 1.2 (1.0-1.3) µm wide possessed a polar filament with 11-12 (rarely 13) turns. All surfaces of the spores were covered with a tightly adherent complex network of numerous densely ramified granulo-fibrillar masses, the longest measuring 1.5 µm long, observed around the caudal processes. The prevalence of infection was 30%. The taxonomic affinities of this parasite with other of the same genus in freshwater South American fish species are discussed.