Author:
TERRY R. S.,DUNN A. M.,SMITH J. E.
Abstract
The cellular distribution of a vertically transmitted, feminizing
microsporidian was followed in its host Gammarus duebeni.
In adult females the parasite was restricted to gonadal tissue, in particular
primary and secondary follicle cells. Spores
were diplokaryotic with a thin spore wall and a short polar filament,
characteristics typical of ‘early’ spores involved in
autoinfection. The diplokaryotic life-cycle, absence of spore groupings
and of a pansporoblast membrane typify the genus
Nosema. However, the unusual globular polaroplast of the spore
and
restriction of this stage to host ovarian tissue have
not previously been described in Nosema. Sporogony occurred only
in
follicle cells adjacent to developing oocytes and was
in synchrony with the process of vitellogenesis. Oocytes were infected
after
formation of intracellular connections with
follicle cells but harboured only vegetative stages of the parasite.
Parasites were associated with the perinuclear cytoplasm
and, in developing embryos, segregated to daughter cells along the axis
of
the spindle. In juvenile animals there was no
evidence of pathology linked with feminization and the parasite was found
at low density in cells under the cuticle. The
parasite is highly adapted to transovarial transmission with an efficient
mechanism of oocyte infection and no evidence of pathology.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Animal Science and Zoology,Parasitology
Cited by
45 articles.
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