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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . Variants of a cloned laboratory stock of the trypanosomatid parasite Crithidia luciliae have been distinguished from “parental type” organisms. These variants accumulated spontaneously over time as the protozoan was maintained by continuous passage in a chemically defined medium. Cloned lines of these variants have been isolated by plating on nutrient agar and partially characterized on the basis of their growth characteristics in culture, their colony and cellular morphology as well as their surface protein expression. One cloned line consisted of motile, flagellated forms which, unlike “parental type” organisms, did not adhere to the surface of culture flasks. Another cloned line was composed of non-adherent, nonmotile, amastigote-like forms which were further distinguished from “parental type” cells by virtue of their constitutive expression, in nutrient-replete medium, of high levels of a surface membrane associated 3′-nucleotidase/nuclease (3′-N'ase) activity. Both the motile, flagellated and amastigote-like variants, like the “parental type” organisms, exhibited elevated levels of the 3′-N'ase activity upon exposure to purine starvation conditions. The variants described are of potential importance in elucidating the mechanism of induction of the highly regulated 3′-N'ase activity as well as for understanding the cytoskeletal systems and the surface properties of these protozoa.
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . A marine kinetoplastid flagellate, Cryptobia eilatica n. sp., is described from the gills of cultured gilt-head sea bream Sparus aurata L. and wild black-spot sea bream Diplodus noct (Valenciennes) in the Red Sea. The trophozoite is elongated and lacks a contractile vacuole and undulating membrane. The body averages 13.5 × 4.1 μm, anterior flagellum 9.7 μm, and free portion of recurrent flagellum 15.2 μm. The ultrastructural features of the species exhibit great similarity to various previously studied Cryptobiids. Cryptobia eilatica trophozoites feed on bacteria, show a preference for the branc hial interlamellar crypts, and attach to the host epithelium by means of the recurrent flagellum. Neither penetration into the epithelial cells, nor any direct damage to host tissue was observed. Cryptobia eilatica inhabits a purely marine habitat, but its trophozoite tolerates salinities as low as 10 ppt.
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  • 3
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . We have used ultrastructural techniques in different malarial species to demonstrate a lysosomal system. First, we have tried to localize acid phosphatase, a typical lysosomal label. Its activity was localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and in endocytic vesicles, and in dense-cored vesicles near the digestive vacuoles, especially in Plasmodium falciparum (FCR3 strain). Then, we have studied the different cellular compartments of the malarial parasite by the zinc iodide-osmium tetroxide technique that heavily contrasted the cellular compartments of the parasite. This experiment led to the observation of a profound rearrangement of the endoplasmic reticulum, especially in P. berghei. A very atypical but functional Golgi apparatus was demonstrated in all the growing stages of the parasite and lysosome-like vesicles were observed, showing a structure very similar to those of the coated vesicles of a true Golgi complex. The presence of these organelles are in favor of the existence of a lysosomal system and of the endogenicity of some enzymes involved hemoglobin degradation.
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  • 4
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . This paper reports on a new phenomenon in the ciliated protists: cytoplasmically determined early sexual maturity. Stock MN1 of the marine hypotrich Euplotes crassus matures immediately after conjugation. We analyzed the respective contribuboas of the nucleus and the cytoplasm to the inheritance of this stable condition. A genetic marker, and new methods in E. crassus for cytoplasmic labeling, production of amicronucleates, and induction of selfing were used. Crosses within and among the early mature (EM) variants and late mature (LM) “wild type” lines were done in ovarious combinations. Descendants of EM conjugants continued to be EM, and descendants of LM continued to be LM, regardless of the different experimental approaches used. The results of the crosses clearly show that the clonally stable, variant EM phenotype is transmitted at conjugation in a non-Mendelian manner through the cytoplasmic lineage. The expression of the trait is independent of the micronuclear genome, but the precise site and nature of the hereditary basis is unknown.
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  • 5
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . Mutant strain d48 and d12 cannot express serotype A. In d48, the A i-antigen gene is present in the micronucleus, but not in the macronucleus. It has recently been shown that d12 contains the A gene in its micronucleus, but its macronucleus lacks the gene. Micronuclear transplantations into enucleated cells were performed to analyze those mutants. Reciprocal transplantation between wild type and d48 confirmed that d48 contains the A gene in the micronucleus and its cytoplasm is defective. Wild type 51 enucleated cells into which were transplanted d12 micronuclei could not express A. Amiccronucleate d12 cells into which were transplanted normal micronuclei from 51 or d48 showed no expression of A. These results show that even if the micronucleus of d12 contains the A gene, it must be abnormal, and its cytoplasm is also defective the same as d48. Genetic analysis showed that heterozygote of d12 and wild type 51 or d48 caused a cure of the cytoplasmic defect of d48 and d12 during the development of macronuclei.
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  • 6
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . The effect of culture age on the rate of oxidation of short-, medium-, and long-chain fatty acids by Leishmania major promastigotes was investigated. Promastigotes from 5-day stationary phase cultures oxidized several saturated fatty acids about 3-to-4-fold faster than cells from late log phase cultures, but [10−14C]oleate was oxidized 9-fold faster. The increase in rate of oxidation was partially reversed within 5 h and almost completely reversed within 30 h after resuspending cells from a 5-day stationary culture in fresh medium. Addition of acetate, leucine, or alanine caused moderate inhibitions of [1-14C]palmitate oxidation, while glycerol had little effect. Glucose, however, was a powerful inhibitor of the oxidation of [1-14C]palmitate and of [1-14C]octanoate. Mannose and fructose were also strong inhibitors of palmitate oxidation, but neither galactose, 2-deoxyglucose or 6-deoxyglucose caused appreciable inhibition. The extent of inhibition by acetate increased with increasing culture age, whereas inhibition by glucose decreased. In addition to demonstrating a reversible rise in β-oxidation capacity with culture age, these data also demonstrate a hitherto unrecognized strong and culture age-dependent inhibition of fatty acid oxidation by glucose.
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  • 7
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . Studies of in vitro interactions between Plasmodium berghei sporozoites and peritoneal macrophages from mice and rats were performed. A videomicroscopic analysis was made of interactions observed by phase-contrast microscopy. Our results showed a diversity of dynamic interactions between sporozoites and macrophages that included no interaction, surface interaction without sporozoite interiorization, active sporozoite penetration, active penetration with subsequent sporozoite escape, macrophage destruction, and the formation of “tethers” or web-like structures by sporozoites that had actively invaded macrophages. Sporozoites are thus clearly capable of actively invading host macrophages and are not restricted to being phagocytosed for interiorization. The formation of “tethers” by the moving sporozoite might function in vivo by anchoring the sporozoite to the cells lining the lumen of the liver sinusoid. Active sporozoite motility appears to be a functional phenomenon involved in sporozoite invasion of host liver cells.
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  • 8
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Book reviewed in this article:Gardiner, C. H., Fayer, R. & Dubey, J. P. 1988. An Atlas of Protozoan Parasites and Animal Tissues.Bryant, C. & Behm, C. 1990. Biochemical Adaptation in Parasites.Dubey, J. P. & Beattie, C. P. 1988. Toxoplasmosis of Animals and Man.Margulis, L., Corliss, J. O., Melkonian, M. & Chapmann, D. J. (ed.) (with 60 contributors). 1990. Handbook of Protoctistia.Esch, G., Bush, A. & Aho, J. (ed.) 1990. Parasite Communities: Patterns and Processes.
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  • 9
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The major manifestations of amoeboid locomotion in Naegleria—cytoplasmic streaming, pseudopod production, cell polarity and focal contact production—require that the actin-based cytoskeleton be extremely dynamic. Whether these features are causally linked is unclear. In an attempt to answer this question we have used the fungal product cytochalasin B (cyt B) to dissect the motility process. This drug can perturb the organisation of actin filaments both in vivo and in vitro. Essentially cyt B acts as a molecule which can cap the barbed ends of actin filaments. Not surprisingly therefore cyt B has an effect on rates of actin polymerization and the dynamic state of actin in the cytoplasm.We have found that cyt B has a profound effect on focal contact production and breakdown. Within minutes of addition of cyt B focal contact production ceases, existing focal contacts are stabilised but cytoplasmic streaming and pseudopod production are not blocked. In conclusion it is now clear that the state of actin required for focal contact production is different from that required for pseudopod extension and cytoplasmic streaming.
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  • 10
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: A chemically defined medium using commercially available α-MEM supplemented with HEPES, L-glutamine, D-glucose, folic acid, D-biotin and adenine supports the luxuriant growth and propagation of Leishmania donovani promastigotes. A peak parasite population of about 7.0 × 107/ml at stationary phase and a population doubling time of 11.4 h for high-subpassage promastigotes were obtained. The medium was suitable for transformation of isolated amastigotes from infected hamster spleen. Promastigotes could be detected by culturing kala-azar patients’bone-marrow aspirate or spleen puncture material in this medium. Four out of six freshly transformed isolates gradually adapted and grew well in this medium. Macroscopic colonies appeared on agar plates prepared with the medium within 16–20 days after inoculation. The cloning efficiency was increased about five-fold by glycerol supplementation.
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  • 11
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Strombidium sulcatum is the type species for the genus Strombidium and has been repeatedly referred to over the last 130 yr. However, there are several taxonomic problems associated with it. We discuss why the original description of S. sulcatum lacks resolution to describe a single species. We conclude that: (1) the description of S. sulcatum sensu Fauré-Fremiet, 1912 be used to diagnose the species; (2) there are ambiguities in several redescriptions of S. sulcatum; and (3) S. sulcatum sensu Lynn et al., 1988 is Strombidium emergens (Leegaard, 1915) Kahl, 1932. From this analysis we present a description for Strombidium inclinatum n. sp. (previously S. sulcatum sensu Fenchel and Jonsson, 1988).
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  • 12
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The microsporidium Nudispora biformis n. g., n. sp., a parasite of a larva of the damsel fly Coenagrion hastulatum in Sweden, is described based on light microscopic and ultrastructural characteristics. Merogonial stages and sporonts are diplokaryotic. Sporogony comprises meiotic and mitotic divisions, and finally eight monokaryotic sporoblasts are released from a lobed plasmodium. Sporophorous vesicles are not formed. The monokaryotic spores are oval, measuring 1.4–1.8 × 2.8–3.4 μm in living condition. The thick spore wall has a layered exospore, with a median double-layer. The polaroplast has two lamellar parts, with the closest packed lamellae anteriorly. The isofilar polar filament is arranged in 6 (to 7) coils in the posterior half of the spore. Laminar and tubular extracellular material of exospore construction is present in the proximity of sporogonial stages. In addition to normal spores teratological spores are produced. The microsporidium is compared to the microsporidia of the Odonata; its possible relations to the genus Pseudothelohania and to the Thelohania-like microsporidia are discussed. The new genus is provisionally included in the family Thelohaniidae.
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  • 13
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The course of malarial infection was compared in pregnant mice inoculated with Plasmodium berghei at different stages of gestation. When 12–14 wk old, pregnant BALB/c mice were inoculated with 1 × 106 of P. berghei NK65-infected red cells at gestation day 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14 or 16, the mice inoculated on gestation days 6–12 expired 6.5 days after inoculation compared to 9.5 days in non-pregnant mice. Parasitemia in these pregnant mice increased rapidly on day 4 after inoculation and anemia also developed earlier on day 5. However, the degree of parasitemia and anemia in the terminal stage of infection in these pregnant mice was milder than that of non-pregnant controls. Blood urea nitrogen increased at the terminal stage although the degree of increase in mice inoculated on gestation days 6–10 was comparatively small. Pregnant malarial mice died earlier with less physiological changes than non-pregnant controls. It was concluded that pregnancy makes the host susceptible to physiological changes caused by malaria.
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  • 14
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The pattern of cytospindle assembly and the modifications of the microtubular cytoplasmic network during division of Paramecium are studied by means of indirect immunofluorescence. The assembly of cytospindle starts at two independent areas placed respectively around the proter's and opisthe's buccal overture. The moment of the microtubule bundles’appearance depends on their distance from the buccal opening, with those closest appearing 1st. The existence of microtubule organizing centers that act transiently during division of Paramecium is discussed.
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  • 15
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    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The fatty acid profiles and contents of protozoa from the rumen fluid of cattle varied according to the type of diet consumed by their host. Changing from a high-quality hay diet to a low-quality hay diet (DA) decreased the proportions of saturated acids and increased the proportions of the unsaturated acids 18:1 cis-9, 18:2 and 18:3 in neutral lipids (NL) and phospholipids (PL). Adding sucrose, urea and sulphur (SUS) to DA increased the proportions of branched chain acids in PL while addition of safflower oil increased polyunsaturated acids in PL and 18:1 trans-11 in NL. Diet did not alter the PL fatty acid content of protozoa but oil supplement of DA resulted in a 10-fold increase in the content of free fatty acids. The defaunating effect of oil supplement was partly reversed by SUS suggesting that factors other than the fatty acid content of cells are important in determining the toxicity of oil to rumen protozoa. The results indicate that the amounts of individual long-chain fatty acids taken up by rumen ciliates are largely determined by their concentrations in rumen digesta.
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  • 16
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: In the cell cortex of the parasitic ciliate Ichthyophthirius multifiliis different kinds of cisternae were observed: the alveolar sacs, thick membrane cisternae and the endoplasmic reticulum. The thick membrane cisternae possess coated dilated rims and sometimes could be observed close to the endoplasmic reticulum. Using cytochemical techniques acid phosphatase, thiamine pyrophosphatase and nucleoside diphosphatase activities were detected in the thick membrane cisternae and in the alveolar sacs of trosphozoites. In the endoplasmic reticulum acid phosphatase activity was not detected and only very small amounts of thiamine pyrophosphatase and nucleoside diphosphatase reaction product were observed. After exit from the host, a reduction in acid phosphatase activity was evident in the alveolar sacs. At theront stage acid phosphatase activity is absent from these structures. However, high thiamine pyrophosphatase and nucleoside diphosphatase activities remain in the alveolar sacs during the whole life cycle. On the other hand, acid phosphatase, thiamine pyrophosphatase and nucleoside diphosphatase activities were detected in thick membrane cisternae of theronts. Based on the morphological aspects and enzymatic content the thick membrane cisternae of the cell cortex are designated as golgian-like cisternae. The cytochemical results point out a relationship between the alveolar sacs and the Golgi complex.
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  • 17
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Electron microscopy of salivary glands of the phytophagous hemipteran Phihia picta infected with Phytomonas serpens revealed the presence of flagellates in the gland periphery beneath the gland envelope, in the gland central lumen, between gland cells in the intercellular space and inside the gland cells. In the latter case, flagellates were found in the cytoplasm whether or not it was surrounded by a vacuolar membrane. Flagellates were always of the promastigote type, sometimes displaying a large twisted body. Morphological peculiarities of flagellates in different gland locations are recorded.
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  • 18
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Freeze fracturing of Myxosporidian spores reveals the occurrence of a continuous layer of transmembrane particles all over the surface area of the valve cells which form the spore envelope. These particles are densely packed all over the P face membrane. Due to their polygonal outline, their diameter (6-7 nm) and their central core, they resemble the particles forming the connections of gap junctions which metabolically couple the neighboring cells in animal tissues. In the present report, the role of the transmembrane particles is still hypothetical. However, they might represent a membrane structural specialization of the spores which are submitted to osmotic variations of the fluid external medium. Furthermore similar transmembrane particles are observed at the level of the septate junction which seals the valve cells. In this occurrence, they are arranged in a series of 40 double rows parallel to the suture of the spore envelope. These findings support the view that Myxosporidia are Metazoa and raise the problem of their origin.
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  • 19
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Coleman, A. W., Goff, L. J. & Stein-Taylor, J. R. (ed.). 1989. Algae as Experimental Systems. Plant Biology.
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  • 20
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: A rare phenomenon can occur in ciliated protists of the genus Euplotes, which can undergo genetic recombination by the normal outbreeding process of conjugation following mild starvation. Occasionally, the dominant mutation for the autogamy trait arises. Individuals possessing the trait show obligate self-fertilization upon mild starvation. This yields, after normal asexual division, a population of individuals that are reproductively isolated from the parental outbreeding strain. A morphometric analysis of sympatric autogamous and non-autogamous populations of Euplotes vannus from Somalia demonstrates that there has been morphological drift in gross body proportions in the autogamous populations. However, the positional patterns of the locomotory organelles on the ventral surface remain unchanged. The changes in body proportions in the autogamous populations are relevant to the mechanics of the conjugation process, which involves fusion of the oral regions of paired cells belonging to complementary mating types.
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  • 21
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: A new species of microsporidium, Nolleria pulicis, is described and named here from the cat flea, Ctenocephalides felis. The genus Nolleria is created and placed within the family Chytridiopsidae. The family is slightly modified to accommodate certain features of intracellular development seen in N. pulicis, which is otherwise very similar to other species in the family Chytridiopsidae. Sporulation is described from ultrastructural analysis of infected midgut epithelial cells of adult C. felis. The term “multiple division by vacuolation” is proposed for describing sporogony as it occurs in this species and certain related species of microsporidia. The probable mode of transmission and apparent absence of merogony are discussed.
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  • 22
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Sphaerospores were found in the kidneys of alevin channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) from a farm in Central California. MulticelluUr developmental stages, similar to C-blood protozoans described for Sphaerospora spp. from cyprinid fishes, were observed in circulating blood and numerous tissues. Upon a 2nd examination of the same population offish 10 days later, sporogonic stages were seen developing into mature Sphaerospores in the lumina of the kidney tubules. Sporogeoesis was asynchronous with simple unicellular stages adjacent to more complex forms with developing polar capsules and valves. Only one elliptical spore (5.6 μm in width, 6.5 μm in thickness by 5.8 μm in length) developed within the surrounding pscudoplasmodium. Thin valves surrounded two sporoplasm cells and two subspherical polar capsules (1.7 × 1.9 μm) which contained a polar filament with four to five turns. The blood stages of the Sphaerospora sp. described here are similar to the trophozoites seen in channel catfish with proliferativc gill disease (PGD). Early stages of PGD also observed in the same population of channel catfish containing developmental and sporogonic stages of this newly recognized Sphaerospora sp. may suggest a causal relationship between this new myxosporean and the gill disease.
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  • 23
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Chromatin spreads made from isolated nuclei of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii show the beaded fibers typical of eukaryotic polynucleosomes. Micrococcal nuclease digestions confirmed the presence of nucleosomes with a repeat length of 189 base pairs, essentially the same as typical mammalian cells. Basic nuclear proteins extracted from isolated nuclei or chromatin with 1 M calcium chloride and 0.3 M hydrochloric acid are resolved into seven major components by electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). These seven components were subjected to qualitative peptide mapping with V8 protease on SDS gels for comparison with the major histone components of calf thymus. Finally, the C. reinhardtii basic nuclear proteins were fractionated by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography and their amino acid composition determined. From these studies, we conclude that C. reinhardtii has a full complement of the five histones with properties very similar to those of both higher animals and higher plants.
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  • 24
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 37 (1990), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites were quiescent in mouse peritoneal fluid or in K2SO4 buffer at pH 8.2. They became consistently motile when K+ was replaced by other monovalent or divalent cations at a constant pH (pH = 8.2). They also became motile when Cl− was substituted for SO42-. Nitrate or SCN−, can also be substituted for Cl− to a certain extent. Tachyzoites showed independent movement for more than 15 min in KCl, and for about 5 min in the other buffers at pH 8.2 after which they were exhausted and stopped. These tachyzoites could not then be further stimulated to motility by renewal of the suspension buffer. Infection of monolayer cells was demonstrated only with parasites which were motile during inoculation. The highest infectivity was thus obtained either with freshly collected tachyzoites or with those preincubated in K2SO4 buffer for 30 min at 37° C at alkaline pH and thus not yet exhausted for motility. Approximately 34 to 38% of these latter organisms were seen to enter cells when they were inoculated into cultures immediately after being resuspended in MEM for 30 min at 37° C. Conversely, those whose motility had been exhausted by the preincubation in buffers other than K2SO4, pH 8.2 could not enter monolayer cells. Additionally, parasites were unable to enter cells when inoculated into cultures in K2SO4 buffer at alkaline pH; instead they remained quiescent on the surface of the monolayer cells, suggesting that Toxoplasma enters the host cells by active invasion.
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  • 25
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Enterocytozoon was 1st described in 1985, in an AIDS patient with intestinal malabsorption and diarrhea. Since then, additional cases of infection with this organism have been observed, but only in individuals with AIDS and malabsorption. Intestinal tissue biopsies were obtained from a 45-year-old man prior to AIDS diagnosis, again nine months later and then at autopsy two months later. When the biopsies were examined electron microscopically, both sets contained the microsporidian parasite. However, the 2nd intestinal biopsy, when wasting was much more severe, contained infection in almost every small intestinal enterocyte examined. The parasite was actively developing, allowing us to detail its life cycle. The parasite is apansporoblastic, polysporous and has characteristics not previously reported in the Microsporida: (1) an electron lucent inclusion not usually seen in Microsporida is prominent and always present; (2) extremely elongated sausage-shaped nuclei occur in the proliferative phase of parasite development; (3) the polar tube development uniquely involves the production of electron dense discs, yet results in the formation of a typical spore; and (4) polar tube development occurs prior to the final division of the multi-nucleate sporont. On the basis of these characteristics, we are placing this genus in a new family, Enterocytozoonidae, n. fam.
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  • 26
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    Notes: Gametogenesis in the foraminifer Cribrothalammina alba involves changes in both the gamontic test and cytoplasm. As gametes begin to differentiate and gametic flagella emerge, pores form in a regular array over the gamontic test, constituting the only avenue for gamete release. The spherical, biflagellated gametes average 1.5μ in diameter and are released in rapidly moving swarms along with flagellated “spherical masses” that probably result from incomplete gametic differentiation. Gametogenesis occurs entirely within the test and utilizes the entire cytoplast. After gamete release is complete, the agglutinated test collapses and disaggregates within a fairly short time. Similar modifications of the gamontic test occur during gametogenesis in Ovammina opaca Dahlgren, but are otherwise unknown among monothalamous agglutinated foraminifera at present.
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  • 27
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Methods for inducing selfing, and the relation between selfing and the life cycle of Euplotes woodruffi syngen 3 are reported. Three intercrossing stocks were used in this experiment. Selfing was induced with several treatments as follows: cell-free fluid from the cultures of complementary mating types; intact cells of GI or S phase in the cell cycle; heat-killed cells, and lysed cells of GI-, S-, and D-phase cells which were prepared by freeze-thawing. Stock SJ-27 was used as a parental stock from which Fl clones were originated through selfing. The other two stocks, SJ-8 and SJ-19, were used as testers. The period of immaturity varied from clone to clone. The heterotypic conjugation of clones with cells of stock SJ-8 seems to occur earlier in the life cycle than with cells of stock SJ-19. This result shows that this syngen has an adolescent period in the life cycle. The length of selfing immaturity seems to be different from that of crossing immaturity, and selfing appeared slightly later than crossing with testers. But the clones in which selfing 1st occurred are considered to be in adolescence or maturity, not in senility. Once selfing appeared in any clone, the clone continued to produce selfing pairs till just before clonal death. The viability of selfing and of outcrossing were compared and found not significantly different. Inbreeding depression took place in some of the F2 clones by successive selfing. The viability of F2 clones from young parents was significantly higher than that from old parents (220 to 230 fissions) both in selfing and outcrossing. The total life spans which were studied in three F1 clones were 168 to 264 fissions.
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  • 28
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Dietary riboflavin deficiency is known to diminish malarial parasitemia. In this study, we determined whether imipramine and amitriptyline, drugs which inhibit riboflavin metabolism, have antimalarial efficacy. In addition, we evaluated whether these drugs, like other antimalarial agents, increase the hemolytic response to ferriprotoporphyrin IX (FP). The growth of Plasmodium falciparum (FCR3) in the absence and presence of these drugs (10 to 75 μM) was measured by determining (3H)hypoxanthine uptake by intraerythrocytic parasites for 48 h in RPMI 1640 medium. The uptake of (3H)hypoxanthine was significantly reduced in a dose-dependent manner by both imipramine and amitriptyline. The IC50 values of imipramine and amitriptyline at 48 h were 56 and 45 μM, respectively. Both drugs enhanced hemolysis induced by FP (10 or 20 μM). No hemolysis by these drugs was detected in the absence of FP. It is concluded that the tricyclic antidepressants, imipramine and amitriptyline, possess substantial antimalarial properties.
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  • 29
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Localization of the S-antigen of Plasmodium falciparum isolate FCQ27/PNG, from Papua New Guinea, was studied by post-embedding immunoelectron microscopy using affinity-purified rabbit antibodies raised against the repeat region of the antigen. Labelling was found in the parasitophorous vacuole (PV) space of early to late schizonts and in PV-related vesicles within the erythrocyte cytoplasm of schizont-infected cells. Other subcellular structures within the erythrocyte cytoplasm were not labelled. After breakdown of the PV membrane, label was observed around the merozoites, consistent with mixing of the PV contents and erythrocyte cytoplasm. The antigen was not found in uninfected cells, ring stages, trophozoites or associated with free merozoites. Antibodies to FCQ27/PNG S-antigen did not react with other isolates tested, whereas rabbit antibodies to the Palo Alto/Wellcome S-antigen repeat region reacted with isolates FCR3 and ItG2F6 but not with FCQ27/PNG.
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  • 30
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    Notes: . The cell volume provided by electronic particle counters may be incorrect. As a particle, or cell, passes the counting device, its volume is calculated as a sphere. The electronically derived, mean cell volume (electronic MCV) of a population of Tetrahymena (prolate spheroid) is smaller than the volume (morphometric MCV) calculated from measured cell length and width. This discrepancy was studied using a Coulter Multisizer particle counter and cell morphometry. The electronic MCV averaged 0.70 of the morphometric MCV (1.00) but changed from 0.72 (fast growth) to 0.63 and 0.76 (slow or no growth) for cells having a mean length/width of 2.05, 2.33, and 1.61, respectively. The measured diameter of latex particles (used for calibration) was identical to that stated, but the diameter of the electronic MCV was larger than the width of the cells which related to wehther the length/width of the cells was above, or below, 2.00. Hence, electron particle counters register primarily the width of a prolate-spheroidal cell, oriented with its long axis in the direction of flow, and uses this value as diameter for the calculated sphere, whereas for more spherical cells, tumbling without any orientation, a mean of the axes is used. Factors for correction of the electronic MCV of Tetrahymena are provided.
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  • 31
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    Notes: . Three strains of Phytomonas serpens two from tomatoes, Lycopersicon esculentum one from the insect Phtia picta (Hemiptera, Coreidae), were cultivated in a chemically defined medium developed from a defined medium for cultivating insect flagellates. Besides organic growth factors required by other insect trypanosomatids this flagellate requires, serine and inositol. Glutamine stimulates growth, and, surprisingly, does not require heme.
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  • 32
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    Notes: . Cricetid rodents, Peromyscus truei and P. boylii, were inoculated with sporulated oocysts of Eimeria arizonensis collected from wild P. truei maintained in the lab. In P. truei the prepatent period was 4–5 days, the patent period was 9–11 days, and sporulated oocysts were 21.5 × 25.0 (20–23 × 24–26) μm with sporocysts 7.7 × 12.0 (6–8 × 10–13) pm. In P. boylii the prepatent period was 6–7 days, the patent period was 8–9 days, and sporulated oocysts were 20.1 × 23.2 (18–22 × 21–24) pm with sporocysts 6.8 × 10.0 (5–8 × 9–12) pm. Sporulated oocysts from both host species were used in direct side-by-side comparison of isozyme banding patterns using protein electrophoresis. The parasite has polytypic loci for leucine aminopeptidase (LAP), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6-PGD). In oocysts from P. truei, LAP showed one band with fast migration and LDH and 6-PGD each showed two bands, one with fast and one with slow migration. In oocysts from P. boylii, LAP and LDH each had one band with slow migration and 6-PGD had one band with moderate migration. Oocysts of E. arizonensis collected from P. boylii were used to inoculate P. truei. The prepatent and patent periods, structural measurements, and isozyrne banding patterns of the resultant oocysts were the same as those from P. truei when inoculated with oocysts from P. truei.
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  • 33
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: . The morphology and morphogenesis of two species of the genus Lembadion, L. lucens and L. bullinum, are described. In both species, left and right ventral kineties converge behind the mouth forming a postoral suture. Buccal infraciliature is formed by one polykinety and two very close paroral kineties (inner and outer). During stomatogenesis, the new oral structures originate from the paroral kineties. The inner paroral kinety forms the new adoral polykinety and regenerates the outer paroral kinety of the proter, while the paroral kineties of the opisthe originate from the outer paroral kinety of the parental cell. Somatic proliferation starts before the stomatogenesis at the equatorial level of the cell, and extends towards the poles forming an equatorial band. Two large invariant zones, anterior and posterior, remain in the dividing cell. Moreover, the kinetodesmal fibers disappear in the proliferation band during the bipartition (fission) process.
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  • 34
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    Notes: . Both the lag period and the time required for the filament and sporoplasm to emerge from Nosema algerae spores were prolonged when germination occurred under hyperosmotic conditions. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) and sucrose inhibited germination, first by preventing eversion of the filament, and then at higher concentrations by preventing stimulation. The size of the spore cases decreased by about 21% following germination, indicating an elastic spore wall and turgor pressure in the dormant spores. Increased pressure during germination was indicated by less osmotically-induced shrinkage in stimulated than in dormant spores and by higher concentration of solutes in the homogenates of germinated than ungerminated spores. These results are consistent with the hypothesis of a pressure increase during germination that is caused by an endogenous increase in solute concentration.
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  • 35
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    Notes: Amoebae were isolated from a natural thermal water source in Michoacaan, Mexico, in September 1986. Two 500-ml samples were taken from pools with water at 45°C and 46°C and concentrated at 2,000 g for 15 min. The sediment was seeded on nonnutritive agar plates and incubated at 42°C. The isolates were axenized in bactocasitone-serum medium. The identification of the isolates was based on their morphology, total protein and isoenzyme patterns by agarose isoelectric focusing, serology, fine structure, agglutination with Concanavalin A, sensitivity to trimethoprim, capacity to kill mice, and their cytopathic effect in Vero cells. The results showed several morphophysiological, biochemical and serological differences between the isolates and the type strain Aq/9/1/ 45D of Naegleria lovaniensis. These remarkable differences provide sufficient evidence to consider one of the isolates a new subspecies, and the other one a morphological variant of N. l. lovaniensis, which can be differentiated from other Naegleriae by their morphology, biochemistry, serology and physiology. The authors propose the name tarasca for the subspecies and purepecha for the morphological variant.
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  • 36
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    Notes: The somatic and buccal infraciliature of Lagynus elegans are described, and aspects of its division and conjugation are reported. Its somatic infraciliature is made up of 37–46 meridianal kineties composed of isolated kinetosomes that have thick and long kinetodesmal fibers. In the anterior zone of the cell, the circumoral infraciliature can be observed: it is composed of short, slightly oblique kinetal segments, which are formed of three kinetosomes each. The brosse of this species consists of 3 or 4 groups that possess 4 to 6 ciliated kinetosomes each; these kinetosomes lack kinetodesmal fibers. On the apical pole of the cell, surrounding the oral opening, a crown of nematodesmata is observed; these nematodesmata are connected to each other by a fibrillar structure. Taking into account these features, we propose that this genus be transferred from the order Prostomatida to a new family, Lagynidae, of the order Prorodontida.
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  • 37
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The present study was undertaken to determine whether murine macrophage cell lines exhibited in vitro amoebicidal activity comparable to that elicited by activated murine peritoneal macrophages. Peritoneal macrophages activated in vivo by bacillus Calmette-Guérin or Propionibacterium acnes demonstrated significant cytolysis of Naegleria fowleri amoebae. The macrophage cell line RAW264.7 also effected cytolysis of amoebae, but to a lesser extent than that elicited by activated peritoneal macrophages. However, the macrophage cell lines, J774A.1 and P388D1, did not exhibit amoebicidal activity. Macrophage conditioned medium prepared from RAW264.7 macrophages mediated cytolysis of L929 tumor cells but had no effect on N. fowleri amoebae. In addition, neither recombinant tumor necrosis factor nor recombinant interleukin-1 exhibited amoebicidal activity. Scanning electron microscopy of co-cultures revealed that N. fowler bound to activated peritoneal macrophages and RAW264.7 macrophages. These results suggest that RAW264.7 macrophages treated in vitro with lipopolysaccharide are similar to macrophages activated in vivo in that they effect contact-dependent cytolysis of Naegleria fowleri amoebae. The RAW264.7 macrophages are unlike primary macrophage cultures in that they either do not release soluble amoebicidal factors into the conditioned medium or they release insufficient quantities.
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  • 38
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    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The natural ecology of a heterosporous microsporidium, Amblyospora connecticus was investigated at three different salt marsh habitats during 1986–1989. The parasite has a well-defined seasonal transmission cycle that occurs regularly each year and intimately involves the primary mosquito host, Aedes cantator, and the intermediate copepod host, Acanthocyclops vernalis. In the spring, the microsporidium is horizontally transmitted from the copepod, where it appears to overwinter, to the mosquito via the ingestion of haploid spores produced in the copepod. Mosquitoes develop a benign infection, and females transmit the microsporidium transovarially to their progeny via infected eggs. Oviposition occurs during the summer and infected eggs hatch synchronously in the fall causing widespread epizootics. Infected larvae die, and the cycle is completed when meiospores are released into the pool and subsequently are eaten by A. vernalis, which reappears in the fall and early winter. Amblyospora connecticus thereby persists by surviving in one of two living hosts throughout most of its life cycle rather than in the extra-corporeal environment. This represents an important survival strategy for A. connecticus as results show the salt marsh habitat to be a relatively unstable environment that is subject to periodic flooding and drying. The adaptive significance of utilizing an intermediate host in the life cycle is discussed as it directly facilitates transmission and enhances survival of the microsporidium.
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  • 39
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    Notes: Morphogenesis of cell division was investigated in Uronychia transfuga utilizing both light microscopy of living and stained specimens and SEM of preserved specimens. The cortical morphogenetic pattern of Uronychia is similar in several respects to that of the members of the family Euplotidae. These features include: the de novo development of the opisthe oral primordium in a subcortical pouch; the development of frontoventral and transverse cirri for both the proter and opisthe from 5 cirral primordia that form de novo within a single latitudinal developmental zone; and the absence of right marginal cirri. The members of the genus Uronychia also show a number of unique characteristics: development of a proter oral primordium that causes partial replacement of the parental adoral zone of oral polykinetids during development of the proter; a large oral membrane that is divided into a right and left component; large caudal cirri that bend to the left; and dorsal kineties comprised of closely set paired-kinetosome kinetids. When compared to the other euplotid-like ciliates, these unique features support the placement of the genus Uronychia in a separate family, Uronychiidae.
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  • 40
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    Notes: To identify the surface features of Holospora obtusa during its differentiation from the reproductive short form to the infectious long form, bacteria of four different buoyant densities were isolated by Percoll density gradient centrifugation of homogenates of host cells or isolated macronuclei, and examined with a scanning electron microscope. Bacteria of buoyant density 1.09 g/ml were reproductive short forms as well as cells at various stages in the elongation process including fully elongated ones. Bacteria of buoyant densities 1.11 g/ml and 1.13 g/ml were premature long forms and those of 1.16 g/ml were mature infectious long forms. Bacteria of buoyant density 1.09 g/ml had an entirely rough surface while those of buoyant densities 1.11 g/ml and 1.13 g/ml were smooth and had wale-like stripes on their surface. A small tapered tip was observed at one end of the bacteria of buoyant density 1.13 g/ml. Bacteria of buoyant density 1.16 g/ml had an entirely smooth surface, but one end always showed a rough surface; this locally differentiated surface of the special tip of the infectious long form may be responsible for both the nuclear and species specificities of the infectivity of H. obtusa. These observations indicate that the surface of H. obtusa changes during differentiation and the special tip develops in bacteria of buoyant density 1.13 g/ml.
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  • 41
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    Notes: The axenically cultured, weakly pathogenic Naegleria fowleri LEE and the highly pathogenic, mouse passaged N. fowleri LEEmp are cytopathic for B103 rat nerve cells in culture. Cytopathogenicity was measured by release of radiolabeled rubidium or radiolabeled chromium from B103 target cells. Cytopathogenicity was time-dependent for up to 18 h and dependent upon amoebae effector to nerve cell target ratios of less than 1:1. Release of51 Cr from B103 cells by either LEE or LEEmp amoebae was enhanced by addition of calcium or magnesium to medium free of these divalent cations but the ion-channel inhibitor, verapamil, or the ionophore A23187 and phorbol myristate acetate did not alter release of 51 Cr from B103 cells cocultured with the amoebae. Cycloheximide or actinomycin D impaired release of 51 Cr from B103 target cells injured by either LEE or LEEmp amoebae. Both strains of amoebae were fractionated by glass bead disruption and high speed centrifugation into membrane and soluble fractions. Each fraction was incubated with either 86Rb or 51 Cr labeled nerve cells. The membrane fraction from LEEmp was more active than the soluble fraction in facilitating rubidium and chromium release. In contrast, the soluble fraction from LEE was more active than the membrane fraction in facilitating rubidium release from radiolabeled target cells. The sequential release of 86Rb and 51 Cr from target cells rather than the simultaneous release of the two isotopes indicates that target cell death is due to the release of ions followed later by the release of large macromolecules. The results indicate that N. fowleri amoebae injure nerve cells by two alternate mechanisms, trogocytosis or contact-dependent lysis.
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  • 42
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    Notes: This paper describes the cortical anatomy and development of mirror-image doublets of Stylonychia mytilus, analyzed using the protargol technique. The reversed, or “left-handed” (LH) component of these doublets is a mirror image of the normal or “right handed” (RH) component with regard to the arrangement of cortical structures. The mirror-image patterning is imperfect, however, as the individual ciliary structures of the LH component all are of normal internal asymmetry, and the orientation of membranelles is inverted. Certain structures that would be expected to form near the line of symmetry are absent. During cell division and cortical reorganization, ciliary primordia arise and become arranged in a mirror-image pattern that is more perfect than that exhibited by the mature structures. Deviations from a mirror-image pattern appear at late stages when organelle sets differentiate within ciliary primordia: for example, the membranelle set differentiates within the oral primordium of the LH component in a sequence that is an inversion rather than a mirror image of the corresponding sequence of the RH component. This mixed control of oral development by different cortical “informational systems” accounts for some of the characteristic abnormalities of the mature oral structures of the LH component.
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  • 43
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    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 30 (1983), S. 0 
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    Notes: One third of a collection of cloned Stylonychia pustulata micronuclear DNA PstI fragments were found to be of a similar size, consistent with their being members of a repetitious sequence family with a repeat size of about 160 base pairs. Cross-hybridization experiments confirmed that these small cloned fragments are related by sequence homology. Hybridization of the cloned repetitious sequences to PstI digested micronuclear DNA revealed a “ladder” of bands (step size = 160 base pairs), indicating that the repeats are found in tandem arrays. This is the first demonstration of highly repetitious, tandemly repeated sequences in a ciliated protozoan.
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  • 44
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    Notes: The erythrocytic developmental cycle of Plasmodium falciparum can be conveniently divided into the ring, trophozoite, and schizont stages based on morphology and metabolism. Using highly synchronous cultures of P. falciparum, considerable variation was demonstrated among these stages in sensitivity to chloroquine. The effects of timed, sequential exposure to several clinically relevant concentrations of chloroquine were monitored by three techniques: morphological analysis, changes in the rate of glucose consumption, and changes in the incorporation of 3H-hypoxanthine into parasite nucleic acids. All three techniques gave essentially identical results. The trophozoite and schizont stages were considerably more sensitive to the drug than ring-stage parasites. Chloroquine sensitivity decreased as nuclear division neared completion. The increase in chloroquine sensitivity was coincident with a marked rise in the rate of glucose consumption and nucleic acid synthesis. The rate of nucleic acid synthesis decreased as schizogony progressed while glucose consumption continued at high rates during this process. The degree of chloroquine sensitivity was not highly correlated with either metabolic activity.
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  • 45
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    Notes: Bloodstream trypomastigote and culture procyclic (insect midgut) forms of a cloned T. rhodesiense variant (WRATat 1) were tested for agglutination with the lectins concanavalin A (Con A), phytohemagglutinin P (PP), soybean agglutinin (SBA), fucose binding protein (FBP), wheat germ agglutinin (WGA), and castor bean lectin (RCA). Fluorescence-microscopic localization of lectin binding to both formalin-fixed trypomastigotes and red cells was determined with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-conjugated Con A, SBA, FBP, WGA, RCA, PNA (peanut agglutinin), DBA (Dolichos bifloris), and UEA (Ulex europaeus) lectins. Electron microscopic localization of lectin binding sites on bloodstream trypomastigotes was accomplished by the Con A-horseradish peroxidase-diaminobenzidine (HRP-DAB) technique, and by a Con A-biotin/avidin-ferritin method. Trypomastigotes, isolated by centrifugation or filtration through DEAE-cellulose or thawed after cryopreservation, were agglutinated by the lectins Con A and PP with agglutination strength scored as Con A 〈 PP. No agglutination was observed in control preparations or with the lectins WGA, FBA or SBA. Red cells were agglutinated by all the lectins tested. Formalin-fixed bloodstream trypomastigotes bound FITC-Con A and FITC-RCA but not FITC-WGA, -SBA, -PNA, -UEA or -DBA lectins. All FITC-labeled lectins bound to red cells. Con A receptors, visualized by Con A-HRP-DAB and Con A-biotin/avidin-ferritin techniques, were distributed uniformly on T. rhodesiense bloodstream forms. No lectin receptors were visualized on control preparations. Culture procyclics lacked a cell surface coat and were agglutinated by Con A and WGA but not RCA, SBA, PP and FBP. Procyclics were not agglutinated by lectins in the presence of competing sugar at 0.25 M. The expression of lectin binding cell surface saccharides of T. rhodesiense WRATat 1 is related to the parasite stage. Sugars resembling α-D-mannose are on the surface of bloodstream trypomastigotes and culture procyclics; n-acetyl-D-galactosamine and D-galactose residues are on bloodstream forms; and n-acetyl-D-glucosamine-like sugars are on procyclic stages.
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  • 46
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    Notes: The cationic permeant fluorescent dye rhodamine 123 (R123) was used to stain Plasmodium yoelii-infected mouse erythrocytes. Fluorescence microscopic observations demonstrated that the parasite, but not the matrix of the infected erythrocyte, accumulated the dye. Differences in fluorescence intensity could not be found at the various developmental stages of the parasite; however, quantitation of the cell-associated dye revealed an increase in R123 uptake with parasite development. The retention of the parasite-associated dye, as measured by fluorescence microscopy and spectrophotometry after extraction of R123 with butanol, was markedly reduced by treatment of the infected erythrocytes with a proton ionophore, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone (CCCP), and an inhibitor of proton ATPase, dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD). These results indicate that the accumulation and retention of R123 in P. yoelii reflect the parasite membrane potential and suggest that the parasite plasma membrane has a membrane potential-generating proton pump.
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    Notes: Distinctive organic-walled resting cysts of at least three different types with a highly conservative morphology appear to characterize specific orders or groups of genera within the Class Polyhymenophorea (Protozoa, Ciliophora), contrasting markedly with the great diversity of form seen in trophic stages. Polyhymenophorean ciliates have been considered in the past to form a cohesive class within the Phylum Ciliophora and, possibly, to represent the pinnacle of ciliate evolution. Evidence from cysts challenges the cohesive nature of the class, suggesting that the hypotrichs should be subdivided and that they have a different phylogenetic origin from the heterotrichs, tintinnids, and oligotrichs.
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    Notes: Yellow-brown, algal symbionts varying in diameter from approximately 5 μ m to 20 μ m, associated with solitary Radiolaria with spongiose skeletons (i.e. Spongodrymus sp.), exhibit fine structural features resembling the Prymnesiida (botanical class, Prymnesiophyceae). A large central vacuole is surrounded by a thin layer of cytoplasm containing plastids with lamellae composed of three thylakoids and granular pyrenoids with internal tubules immersed between the thylakoids. The pyrenoids lack internal thylakoid membranes. The nucleus is surrounded by a dilated cisterna of the nuclear envelope that also encloses the plastids and gives rise to saccules of the endoplasmic reticulum. The algal symbionts appear coccoid; hence no flagella nor surface scales were observed. The symbiont fine structure is compared to similar yellow-brown symbionts associated with Acantharia. Thus far, three kinds of algal symbionts have been observed to be associated with solitary Radiolaria: dinoflagellate, prasinomonad, and this apparent prymnesiomonad.
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    Notes: Ultrastructural observations of the cortically-located mitochondria of Tetrahymena thermophila revealed associations not only between the mitochondria and certain of the cortical microtubule bands, but also between the mitochondria and the epiplasm of the cortex. Most of the distal mitochondrial surface is close and parallel to the epiplasm; favorable views show bridge-like structures spanning the 20–10 nm gap between the mitochondrion and the epiplasm.Previous studies have shown that the placement of mitochondria in the cortex appears to be determined by certain of the cortical microtubule bands. This study, however, shows that mitochondrion-microtubule interactions account for only a small proportion of the total mitochondrial area associated with the cortex; the rest is accounted for by the epiplasm. A possible analogue of the spectrin layer of erythrocyte membranes, the epiplasm may be important in helping to arrange the intricately organized components of the ciliate cortex. Its involvement in apparently helping to “moor” mitochondria to their cortical sites is the first suggestion of any role in cell patterning played by the epiplasm.
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  • 52
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    Notes: Ce Tetradimorpha, rencontre en eau douce se présente soit sous forme sphérique pourvue de quatre flagelles et d'axopodes rayonnants, soit sous forme allongée avec a l'avant quatre flagelles associes a quatre axopodes et a l'arriére six a huit axopodes divergents. L'etude ultrastructurale révèle un cytosquelette axopodial de type centroplastidie comprenant un centroplaste lenticulaire homogéne, centre organisateur des quatre axopodes anterieurs et des six a huit axopodes posterieurs, auquel s'ajoutent les quatre cinetosomes des flagelles anterieurs. En outre, un deuxiéme éleément cytosquelettique incluant un microtubule associe chacun des quatre cinetosomes a l'axopode antérieur correspondant. Des cordons microfibrillaires réunissent axopodes et cinetosomes au niveau du centroplaste, puis a quelque distance du centroplaste les axopodes posterieurs. Les axonémes des axopodes comprenant de 5 a 30 microtubules sont constitues de triades, lorsqu'on peut détecter une organisation. Le noyau, a nucléole central est coince dans le cone axopodial posterieur, lui-méme entouré des dictyosomes. Par l'organisation du cytosquelette, par la structure des kinétocystes, par la structure des flagelles dépourvus de mastigonémes tubulaires, Tetradimorpha différe nettement de Ciliophrys marina. Comme le prévoyait Davidson (1975), il represönte bien un des chainons dans la série évolutive des Héliozoaires centrohélidiens. Mais il ne présente guère d'affinites avec les Chrysomonadines considerees comme la souche des Héliozoaires. L'intéret de ce Protiste dans l'étude de la differentiation et de l'evolution du cytosquelette est également présente.〈section xml:id="abs1-2"〉〈title type="main"〉ABSTRACTThis freshwater species of Tetradimorpha has a spherical body with four flagella and radiating axopods; it transforms into a pear-shaped cell that anteriorly has four flagella intercalated between four axopods and posteriorly has six to eight divergent axopods. Ultrastructural study reveals an axopodial cytoskeleton of the centrohelidan type comprising an homogeneous lenticular centroplast which acts as MTOC for axopodial microtubules. A second skeletal element is a microtubular linkage between the kinetosomes and the axonemes of anterior axopods. A microtubule embedded in dense material diverges from near the base of each kinetosomes and parallels the distal portion of the axoneme of each anterior axopod. A microfibrillar envelope around the centroplast links the axopodial bases to the kinetosomes situated just above. Close to the centroplast, microfibrillar strands link the axopodial axonemes to the kinetosomes. Axopodial axonemes are composed of 5 to 30 microtubules irregularly arranged except for some that form equilateral triangles. The nucleus containing a central nucleolus is constrained within a cone formed by the axonemes of the posterior axopods and surrounded by dictyosomes. By the cytoskeletal organization, the structure of kinetocysts, and flagella wthout tubular mastigonemes, Tetradimorpha differs obviously from Ciliophrys marina. As Davidson (1975) predicted, Tetradimorpha is an intermediate link in the centrohelidan lineage: however, it lacks the characteristics of chrysomonads, the supposed ancestors of Heliozoa. The contribution of this genus to the study of the differentiation and the evolution of the cytoskeleton is also presented and discussed.
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    Notes: Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis was used to identify the patterns of protein synthesis during initiation, and the patterns of membrane protein expression following initiation, in all of the mating types of the Tetrahymena thermophila B family. In addition, one-dimensional analysis was used to survey 125I-Concanavalin A-binding proteins. Although a large number of proteins was identified by each technique, no variation among the mating types was observed.
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    Notes: Cells of Tetrahymena pyriformis, T. thermophila, and Euglena gracilis were saturated with nitrogen gas at pressures up to 300 atm and rapidly decompressed. Damage was assessed by measuring post-decompression cell fragmentation or viability. Occurrence of intracellular bubbles was determined by cinephotomicrography performed during the decompression or by direct observations afterwards. The extreme gas supersaturations induced led to intracellular bubble formation and rupture in cells of Tetrahymena that contained food vacuoles, but only with supersaturations of 175 atm or higher; 225 atm left few cells intact. Bubbles were never observed in cells of Euglena or in Tetrahymena cells freed of food vacuoles, even when they were decompressed from substantially higher nitrogen supersaturations. Cells of Euglena were most resistant and were unaffected by supersaturations up to 250 atm.
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    Notes: The rapid, synchronous differentiation of N. gruberi from amoebae to flagellates is a useful paradigm to study aspects of cell differentiation, including regulation of the synthesis of proteins that are related to the changes in cell shape and motility, which occur during differentiation. The differentiation requires synthesis of new RNA and protein molecules to accomplish defined morphogenetic events. Specific new proteins, including the tubulins that form the flagellar microtubules, are synthesized at various times during differentiation, and particular mRNA species appear and disappear. The time course of the synthesis of the α and β subunits of flagellar tubulin is paralleled by the programmed appearance and disappearance of flagellar tubulin mRNAs. The evidence supports the hypothesis that the synthesis of flagellar tubulin is regulated by the transcription, and subsequent disappearance, of flagellar tubulin mRNA. Translatable mRNAs for two calmodulin-like calcium-binding proteins appear and disappear contemporaneously with those for flagellar tubulin. During differentiation the synthesis of actin, the major protein of amoebae, is selectively shut down, and translatable actin mRNA rapidly disappears. This description of the orderly appearance, utilization, and disappearance of the mRNAs for actin, calcium-binding proteins, and flagellar tubulin during differentiation provides means and motivation to investigate the mechanisms that regulate these events.
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    Notes: Earlier experimental work involving macronuclear implants in Stentor coeruleus has shown that the cytoplasmic cortex of the nuclear site 1) attracts the macronucleus and 2) holds it in place during interphase. Now experiments indicate macronuclei transferred with overlying cortex elongate in the direction of the transferred cortical pigment stripes, whether or not the transferred stripes realign in the direction of the host stentor's stripes. Therefore the third function of the cortex is to determine the direction of elongation and thus assure that both daughter cells at division receive part of the macronucleus.
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    Notes: During an electron microscopic study of Glugea stephani, three morphologically distinct tubular appendages that are continuous with the sporoblast plasmalemma were observed. The tubules were designated as: type I, 45–50 nm in diameter and 600–900 nm in length; type II, 25–35 nm in diameter, averaging 1300 nm in length; type III, 50–70 nm in diameter and with an indeterminate length, which often exceeds 3000 nm. Type III tubules contain regularly spaced, electron-dense particles that are approximately 30 nm in diameter. Since many genera of microsporida have some type of appendage, which may eventually be utilized for taxonomic purposes, we propose the formation of a system of serially numbered detailed descriptions of these structures to promote uniformity and clarity in future publications.
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    Notes: Cells of Paramecium tetraurelia, stock hrd, cultured in a micro-capillary containing 1 μl fresh culture medium, expressed mating activity through the whole cell cycle. Mating-reactive G2 phase cells can conjugate with cells of other phases. The G2 phase cells, which have double (4C) the normal micronuclear DNA content, undergo pre-meiotic DNA synthesis when conjugated with G1 phase cells. The micronucleus of the progeny from the cross between a G1 and a G2 cell becomes triploid.
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    Notes: Buffered solutions of KCl and NaCl were tested for their stimulatory effect on the germination of variously-aged spores of Vavraia culicis. Germination was optimal in 0.2 M KCl, pH 6.5 for one isolate, and, for another isolate, peaks of germination occurred at pH 7.0 and 9.5. Spores incubated for several hours in suboptimal solutions became unable to germinate under optimal conditions. After being returned to water, they regained their ability to germinate. Calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, and ammonium chloride inhibited germination. After ingestion by mosquito larvae, spores germinated near the posterior end of the midgut.
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    Notes: . Leishmania tropica promastigotes transport α-aminoisobutyric acid (AIB), the nonmetabolizable analog of neutral amino acids, against a substantial concentration gradient. AIB is not incorporated into cellular material but accumulates within the cells in an unaltered form. Intracellular AIB exchanges with external AIB. Various energy inhibitors (amytal, HOQNO, KCN, DNP, CCCP, and arsenate) and sulfhydryl reagents (NEM, pCMB, and iodoacetate) severely inhibit uptake. The uptake system is saturable with reference to AIB-and the Lineweaver-Burk plots show biphasic kinetics suggesting the involvement of two transport systems. AIB shares a common transport system with alanine, cysteine, glycine, methionine, serine, and proline. Uptake is regulated by feedback inhibition and transinhibition.
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    Notes: . Oxytricha strains used in biochemical studies have traditionally been grown in unaerated, unagitated culture tubes or Fernbach flasks. These cultures are limited in volume to about one liter and have a very nonuniform distribution of cells, with the majority of the cells at the very top or bottom of the medium. We have found conditions in which Oxytricha can be grown in 50-liter fermentation vats. The cultures grow to a uniform density of about 6000 cells/ml.
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    Notes: . The fine structure of the tomite of Foettingeria actiniarum (Claparède) was examined and compared with that of other apostome tomites. This stage in the life cycle has a unique configuration of kineties that form a spiral through the cytoplasm in the interior of the body. The structure and behavior of this internal spiral were evaluated as a mechanism for the storage of kinetosomes, an adaptation to the ciliate's two-host life cycle. The spiral is composed of nine ribbons of laterally compressed kinetosomes that are in contact with a thin electron-dense fibril. Paralleling the kineties of the spiral are conspicuous, swollen lamellae of the rough endoplasmic reticulum; these lamellae contain moderately electron-dense material. The spiral is associated with the large contractile vacuole and winds about the macronucleus. The tomite of Foettingeria possesses a single, robust, caudal cilium located in a pit, along with the nozzle-like pore of the contractile vacuole. The walls of the pit contain several trichocysts arranged radially about the caudal cilium and aimed into the pit.
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    Notes: . Fine structural studies of a specialized vesicle system associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of exo-erythrocytic Plasmodium berghei suggest that this system may be the equivalent of a Golgi apparatus. Patches of ER, randomly distributed in the cytoplasm of developing parasites, are formed of smooth and ribosome-studded cisternae intermingled with each other. The vesicle systems are located between as well as at the edges of ER aggregates and appear to be in different stages of budding from the cisternae. Prolonged osmication reveals distinct staining of the nuclear envelope and ER of the parasites as well as part of the Golgi apparatus of the hepatocytes. However, the small vesicles associated with the parasite's ER are unstained, as are the coated vesicles in the Golgi region of the liver cell. These sites in the parasite cytoplasm seem comparable to the concave surface of the Golgi apparatus in liver cells. The pinched-off vesicles fuse with others to form the prominent peripheral vacuolization characteristic of the nearly mature exo-erythrocytic form. The formation of these peripheral vacuoles and their subsequent fusion with the parasite membrane may be an exocytosis mechanism supplying the rapidly expanding parasite with new plasma membrane material.
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    Notes: . Ultrastructural cytochemical techniques were used to analyze the nucleus and the kinetoplast of epimastigotes of Trypanosoma cruzi. With the use of ethanolic phosphotungstic acid, which detects basic proteins, reaction product was seen in the chromatin and at the periphery of the kinetoplast. Thallium alcoholate, which interacts with DNA, stained strongly the whole kinetoplast and the chromatin. With the use of a silver impregnation method that detects acidic nucleolar proteins, silver granules were seen preferentially located in the central region of the nucleolus. With the EDTA method, which reveals the presence of ribonucleoproteins, staining was observed in the nuclear pores. Also 6–8 nm fibrils, 25 nm and 40 nm granules, which correspond to the perichromatin fibers, interchromatin granules and the perichromatin granules, respectively, were identified in the nucleus. The EDTA method also revealed the presence of 40 nm granules in the kinetoplast. These granules were seen mainly at the two extremities of the kinetoplast. Freeze-fracture images indicate that the nuclear membrane contains ca. 9 pores/μm2 of nuclear surface area. The mean diameter of the pores was 80 nm. All these results suggest that epimastigotes of T. cruzi have a very active nucleus and a high rate of nucleocytoplasmic interchange.
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    Notes: . The ultrastructural appearance of cortical structures of Protoopilina australis is described. With respect to kinetosomal architecture and the supports of the surface folds, Protoopalina australis has an ultrastructural identity similar to other opalines. However, microfibrillar tracts and regular arrays of cortical vesicles—evident in Opalina and Cepedea—are absent from the binucleate genera. This new insight, combined with the recent discovery of a new genus (Protozelleriella) is used to revise our understanding of the evolution of slopalines and we favour a common origin for the multinucleate genera Opalina and Cepedea.
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    Notes: . Leishmania major promastigotes were grown to late-log phase and washed and resuspended in an isosmotic buffer. When osmolality was suddenly decreased by 50%, the cells rapidly became shorter and increased in width. Cell volume, calculated assuming a prolate-ellipsoidal shape, increased 1.4 times after 1 min. Over the next several minutes, the average length and width returned to control values while the volume returned to baseline, indicating the ability to regulate volume. Concomitantly with the swelling, large amounts of alanine and other ninhydrin-positive substances were released. All of the alanine pool was released within 1 min after reduction of the osmolality by 66%. Cells pre-loaded with [14C]-aminoisobutyric acid also released it very rapidly upon hypo-osmotic stress. Release of ninhydrin-positive substances resulted from decreased osmolality rather than changes in ionic composition. The same results were obtained if osmolality was decreased by reducing only the NaCl content of the buffer instead of diluting it with water, and mannitol could substitute for the NaCl. Promastigotes were able to grow well over several days in media as low as 154 mOsm/kg. The nature of the signalling mechanism(s) that initiates the rapid shape change and efflux of ninhydrin-positive substances in response to hypo-osmotic stress is at present unknown.
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    Notes: . The sexual stages and sporogonic development of Haemogregarina balli an apicomplexan blood parasite of snapping turtles, Chelydra serpentina were studied by electron microscopy for 30 days post feeding (PF). Gamonts were invested by an extracellular sheath which fused with intestinal microvilli. All stages of development were observed epicellularly within intestinal epithelial cells of the leech Placobdella ornata. Nuclear division in microgametogenesis was characterized by a trans-nuclear cytoplasmic channel containing the spindle fibers. Basal bodies associated with nuclear division were unpaired with an atypical (8 + 0) microtubular conformation. Four aflagellate microgametes were formed. During fertilization, a single microgamete was enclosed in a pocket of a microgamont. The pocket was lined by a dense layer and underlying ER. In sporogony, nuclei were invested by a trilaminar pellicle as they divided, forming four anlagen. Each anlage divided by longitudinal binary fission forming eight sporozoites in mature oocysts. Sporozoites penetrated the intestinal epithelium by 27 days PF.
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    Notes: . Normally, sporozoites of Eimeria tenella are efficiently excysted in vitro with trypsin and bile salts. However, a one hour treatment at °40C with a chelator-supplemented excystation medium (purified trypsin and chymotrypsin, taurodeoxycholate and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid in buffered saline) produced incomplete excystation. The treatment removed the sporocyst plug and left an opened sporocyst containing motile sporozoites, but the release of sporozoites was greatly reduced (〈12% release). Some of the sporozoites extended a portion of their anterior end through the sporocyst opening then retracted it into the sporocyst. Sporozoites were released when magnesium was added to the chelator-supplemented medium. Manganese was less effective and calcium was ineffective in producing release. Also, sporozoites were released when the incompletely excysted sporocysts were transferred to buffered saline with albumin and this became the basis for a new assay. The assay demonstrated that ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid reduced release in the presence of taurodeoxycholate but not in its absence. Hydrophobic and hydrophilic chelators were tested in the assay. Ethylene-dioxy diethylene-dinitrilotetraacetic acid and 8-hydroxyquinoline were inactive. The chelator 1,10-phenanthroline did not require bile salt to reduce release. The inhibitory effects by phenanthroline were eliminated in the presence of magnesium or manganese, while calcium had no effect. Thus, although certain chelators can inhibit release, a consistent correlation between chelation and inhibition of release has not been established. The application of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid with taurodeoxycholate as a reversible inhibitor of release is discussed.
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    Notes: . Trypanosoma brucei bloodstream forms express a densely packed surface coat consisting of identical variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) molecules. This surface coat is subject to antigenic variation by sequential expression of different VSG genes and thus enables the cells to escape the mammalian host's specific immune response. VSG turnover was investigated and compared with the antigen switching rate. Living cells were radiochemically labeled with either 125I-Bolton-Hunter reagent or 35S-methionine, and immunogold-surface labeled for electron microscopy studies. The fate of labeled VSG was studied during subsequent incubation or cultivation of labeled trypanosomes. Our data show that living cells slowly released VSG into the medium with a shedding rate of 2.2 ± 0.6% h−1 (t1/2= 33 ± 9 h). In contrast, VSG degradation accounted for only 0.3 ± 0.06% h−1 (t1/2= 237 ± 45 h) and followed the classical lysosomal pathway as judged by electron microscopy. Since VSG uptake by endocytosis was rather high, our data suggest that most of the endocytosed VSG was recycled to the surface membrane. These results indicate that shedding of VSG at a regular turnover rate is sufficient to remove the old VSG coat within one week, and no increase of the VSG turnover rate seems to be necessary during antigenic variation.
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    Notes: . Actinocephalus carrilynnae, a new species of actinocephalid gregarine, is described from the blue damselfly, Enallagma civile. Trophozoites are unpaired, lying between the host's gut epithelium and peritrophic membrane, and attain a maximum length of at least 1,700 μm. Protomerites are subspherical. Epimerites are globular, hemispherical with stub-shaped or truncated cone-shaped projections and are attached to the protomerite by means of a fluted stalk. Protomerite-deutomerite length ratio is 0.12 and relatively constant regardless of trophozoite length. Gametocysts are subspherical, 270–280 μm in diameter, and undergo sporogenesis in 24–36 h, dehiscing by rupture. Spores are biconical, slightly crescent-shaped, and very uniform in size: 15 μm long and 4–5 μm wide. The parasite infects both adult and naiad hosts.
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    Notes: . A free-living amoeba identified as Hartmannella vermiformis was isolated from a water sample obtained during an investigation of nosocomial legionellosis. Hartmannella vermiformis is known to support the intracellular multiplication of Legionella pneumophila. This strain of H. vermiformis, designated CDC-19, was cloned and established in axenic culture to develop a model for the study of the pathogenicity of legionellae. Isoenzyme patterns of axenically-cultivated strain CDC-19 were compared with two strains of H. vermiformis derived from the type strain, one axenic (ATCC 50236) and the other grown in the presence of bacteria (ATCC 30966). Enzyme patterns suggested that all three strains are assignable to the species H. vermiformis. Axenic H. vermiformis strain CDC-19 has been deposited with the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC 50237) and should prove useful in the study of protozoan-bacterial interaction.
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    Notes: . Book reviewed in this article:Chretiennot-Dinet, M.-J. 1990. Chlorarachniophycées, Chlorophycées, Chrysophycées, Cryptophycées, Euglénophycées, Eustigmatophycées, Prasinophycées, Prymnésiophycées, Rhodophycées, Tribophycées. Atlas du Phytoplanction marinBloodgood, R. A. (ed.). 1990. Ciliary and Flagellar Membranes.Capriulo, G. M. (ed.) with 10 contributors. 1990. Ecology of Marine Protozoa. Oxford University Press
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    Notes: . In this paper we show that murine lung conditioned medium (LCM) displays, in addition to its already described colony-stimulating activity on bone marrow cells, a potent growth-stimulating activity on promastigotes of Leishmania mexicana amazonensis. Immunoprecipitation of LCM with an antibody specific for murine granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) abrogates both activities, indicating that the leishmanial growth-promoting activity is due to the presence of GM-CSF on LCM. Furthermore, recombinant GM-CSF (rGM-CSF) added to the culture medium or to the immunoprecipitated LCM is able to respectively induce or to partially recover the growth-promoting activity of the LCM. Sequential in vitro passages of the parasite induces a progressive loss of sensitivity to the growth-factor. Parasite forms recently collected from lesions are significantly more responsive to the growth-factor than forms already adapted to grow in culture. Since it has been shown that several different microorganisms display receptors for vertebrate-like hormones and that GM-CSF is able to enhance a cutaneous leishmanial lesion, our results permit us to raise the hypothesis that a direct interaction between a host-derived hormone and a pathogenic microorganism can be of importance in defining the fate of an infection. The fact that GM-CSF is produced by cells that actively participate in a leishmanial infection (T-lymphocytes and macrophages) reinforces our hypothesis.
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  • 77
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    Notes: . Trichomonas vaginalis and Tritrichomonas foetus contain glucokinase and not a hexokinase of broad hexose specificity. Tritrichomonas foetus also contains a specific fructokinase which could be resolved from glucokinase by anion exchange chromatography. Native T. vaginalis glucokinase had a Mr of 76,000, and SDS-PAG electrophoresis showed two equally stained bands corresponding to Mr 40,000 and 38,000. Glucose and ATP were by far the best substrates for both trichomonad glucokinases, with Km values as low as 33–35 μM and 75–83 μM, respectively. Substrate saturation curves for these enzymes were all hyperbolic. Tritrichomonas foetus fructokinase required fructose and ATP, with Km values of 200 μM and 81 μM. None of the activities was affected by a number of potential regulatory metabolites, including glucose-6-phosphate. The only exception was AMP which in supraphysiological concentrations had an inhibitory effect on T. foetus fructokinase. In conclusion, the absence of regulation at the hexose phosphorylation step described here, as well as the presence of an easily reversible PPi: fructose-6-phosphate 1 -phosphotransferase described previously (Mertens, E., Van Schaftingen, E. & Müller, M. 1989. Mol. Biochem. Parasitol., 37:183–190), suggest that the rate of the 1st part of glycolysis in trichomonads is controlled only by the intracellular availability of hexoses.
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  • 78
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    Notes: . The sera of 21 different species of primates were surveyed for the presence of a trypanocidal factor to a monomorphic human serum-sensitive clone of Trypanosoma brucei gambiense (T.b.g.); human, gorilla, baboon (2 species), and the mandrill were found to contain this factor. The factor in all the sera is in the high density lipoprotein (HDL) fraction, and has similar modes of biological action. It has been shown that the human and gorilla trypanocidal factor share cross-reactive antigenic epitopes, but do not share similar cross-reactive epitopes with the baboon and mandrill factor. There was no relationship between the presence or absence of this factor and the primate's position on the phylogenetic tree. In addition, there was also no obvious correlation between the animals’preferred diet, and the presence or absence of trypanocidal activity. The evidence to date suggests that only African ground-dwelling primates that live in tsetse endemic areas contain the trypanocidal factor. It is assumed that this factor is involved in resistance of these primates to T.b.b. We believe that the host has developed trypanocidal substances as a result of selective evolutionary pressure by the African trypanosomes.
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  • 79
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    Notes: . It has long been thought that the cyst form of Pneumocystis carinii, which can resist host defenses and antimicrobial drugs, is responsible for relapses of P. carinii pneumonia. The thick wall of the cyst is immunogenic and rich in glucosyl/mannosyl and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine residues. In this study we have demonstrated the presence of a hitherto unreported outer membrane in the cyst wall of P. carinii. This membrane was detected by a combination of techniques, including transmission electron microscopy, freeze-fracture electron microscopy, and membrane labeling with fluorescent lipid analogs following treatment of P. carinii cysts from infected rats for 30 min with Zymolyase, a β-1–3 glucanase. As in gram-negative bacteria and blue-green algae, this 2nd membrane may have an important role in osmoregulation and nutrient utilization; it may also mediate the interaction of P. carinii with its host and serve as a target for drug therapy.
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    Notes: This review summarizes knowledge about the structure of nuclear genes and mitochondrial DNA in Acanthamoeba. The information about nuclear genes is derived from studies of DNA, RNA and protein sequences. The genes considered are those for 5S, 5.8S and 18S rRNA, actin I, profilins Ia/b and II, myosins IB, IC and II, and calmodulin. All of the sequences show strong similarities to comparable sequences from other organisms. Introns have been found in the actin and myosin genes. The location of the actin intron is unique, but many of the myosin introns occur at the same sites as introns in myosins of other organisms. Sequence comparisons, especially of 5S and 5.8S rRNA and actin, support previous evidence, based primarily on 18S rRNA, that Acanthamoeba genes are at least as closely related to those of higher plants and animals as they are to various other protistan genera. The functional organization of the promoter region for the nuclear rDNA transcription unit has been studied extensively, but there is a need for information about the functional organization of regulatory sequences for other genes. Restriction fragment length profile (RFLP) studies of mitochondrial DNA reveal relatively high levels of overall sequence diversity, but information on the structure and function of individual genes is needed. The RFLP appear to have potential as tools for taxonomic studies of this genus.
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    Notes: Ultrastructural evidence indicates that bacteria are routinely incorporated into the Cells Chroomonas Pochmanni. This strain has a specialized vacuole for capturing bacteria and retaining them in this vacuole. Bacteria appear to be drawn into the vacuole through a small opening which becomes occluded by membranes, completely enclosing the Bacteria. On rare occasions, ohter membrane components and intact ejectisomes also become incorporated into this vacuole. Bacteria-like remnants in small vesicles, in other locations in the cell, suggest that bacteria are digested in these vesicles.
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    Notes: We describe how to obtain an increased merozoite invasion of Plasmodium falciparum into human erythrocytes during short periods of time. Using this procedure, infected erythrocytes show multiple invasions (2–4 merozoites per erythrocyte), amplifying, several times, the effects of parasite entry into host cells. The procedure yields synchronous cultures (2-h age range) with parasitemia as high as 15%. It is possible to reach parasitemia of 50% or higher allowing for a 6-h invasion period.
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  • 83
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    Notes: Feces from a specimen of Tamandua tetradactyla (Linn.) from Portel, Para State, north Brazil, contained two different coccidial oocysts; one identified as Eimeria tamanduae Lainson 1968, and the other as a new species, described here as Eimeria corticulata n. sp. Oocysts of E. corticulata are ellipsoidal, 37.4 × 30.4 (31.2–43.7 × 23.7–35.0) μm, shape index (length/width) 1.2 (1.0–1.5). Oocyst wall 2.5–3.7 μm thick and composed of two layers; an outer thick, brown-yellow one with radial striations, and a thin inner smooth one: no visible micropyle. Oocyst residuum a large globule of about 10.7 × 10.3 μm, usually accompanied by a number of smaller attached globules. Sporocysts ellipsoidal, 21.0 × 11.0 (20.0–22.5 × 10.0–12.5) μm, with a conspicuous Stieda body: shape index 1.9 (1.6–2.2). Sporocyst residuum a small number of scattered granules: sporozoites 18.7 × 5.0 μm, with a large posterior refractile body. Eimeria zygodontomyis n. sp. is described in feces from Zygodontomys lasiurus (Lund) from the Serra dos Carajas, Para. Oocysts ellipsoidal to cylindrical, 16.5 × 12.0 (13.7–18.7 × 11.2–12.3) μm, shape index 1.4 (1.2–1.5). Wall colorless, smooth, single-layered and about 0.6 μm thick: no micropyle. No oocyst residuum, but a polar granule of about 1.8 × 1.0 μm is sometimes present. Sporocysts ellipsoidal, 8.4 × 5.5(7.5–8.7 × 5.0–6.2) μm, shape index 1.5 (1.4–1.7), with a thin colorless wall and a delicate Stieda body. Sporozoites enclose a compact residuum of about 2.5 × 3.7 μm.
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    Notes: . Homogenates of trophozoites of Entamoeba histolytica were shown to bring about the total degradation of glycogen while purified phosphorylase of the same source alone yielded a limit dextrin as end product. An enzyme system capable of debranching the limit dextrin was obtained from the 40,000 g pellet by extraction in aqueous medium, purified by gel filtration on Fractogel TSK HW-55(F), and separated from phosphorylase by chromatography on Blue Sepharose CL-6B and aminobutyl Agarose. The glycogen-debranching system was purified 540-fold to a state of homogeneity by criterion of disc-gel electrophoresis. The purified enzyme was able to degrade glycogen-limit dextrin in the presence of phosphorylase and exhibited activities of both amylo-1,6-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.33) and 4-α-glucanotransferase (EC 2.4.1.25). Although amylo-1,6-glucosidase released glucose from a glycogen-phosphorylase limit dextrin, transferase activity moved single glucose residues from the limit dextrin to 4-nitrophenyl-α-glucoside yielding successively 4-nitrophenyl-α-maltoside and 4-nitrophenyl-α-maltotrioside that could be detected by HPLC. Native glycogen-debranching system exhibited a relative molecular mass of Mr= 180,000 ± 10% by gel filtration and gel electrophoresis in both denaturing and nondenaturating conditions.
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    Notes: . In the ciliate Glaucoma scintillans, the process of transformation of unbalanced homopolar doublets to singlets was investigated. Cells were fixed 1–3 days after inoculation and impregnated with silver according to the Chatton-Lwoff technique. The two oral apparatuses (OAs) approached each other partly due to a loss of ciliary rows in one of the two components (semicells) consisting of a doublet. The contractile vacuole pore (CVP) in the narrow semicell (sc1) was lost at an early stage of regulation, while the position of CVP in the broad semicell (sc2) shifted toward the right after the loss of sc1. The sc1 of 20 row-intervals in breadth was a transition point above which the sc1 was able to persist for awhile, and beneath which it was actively lost. There was no evidence for an independent effect of sc2 on the transformation of doublets to singlets. In cell division, an additional reversed oral primordium (sOP) was formed in unbalanced doublets, usually within a narrow sc1 of 11–20 row-intervals. The position of the sOP was generally 4–6 row-intervals distant from the right side of the oral meridian (OM1) with the cell's left OA. Most of the doublets with an sOP lacked an oral primordium in the OM1. No mature triplet with 2 normal OAs and an abnormal OA was found in these preparations. The pathway of regulation, the movement of the CVP, and the formation of an sOP are discussed.
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    Notes: . A new species of ascetosporan parasitizing tissues of woodboring mollusks of the genus Teredo, including T. navalis Linnaeus, T. furcifera von Martens, and T. bartschi Clapp, is described from light and transmission electron microscopical observations. The new species is assigned the name Minchinia teredinis sp. n. (Phylum Ascetospora, Class Stellatosporea, Order Balanosporida, Family Haplosporidiidae). Plasmodia, sporonts, sporocysts, and mature spores are found in all host tissues, but primarily in the gill. Spores are obovate, operculate, and characterized by four projections from the epispore membrane. The species is found from Long Island Sound to Virginia on the east coast of the United States. The parasite causes extensive damage to host tissues and is correlated with reductions in host populations.
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    Notes: . Mice infected with the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of human Chagas’disease, develop immunosuppressed responses to heterologous antigens. Experiments were performed using infected mice in the acute stage of infection to assess immunoregulatory activities during induction of direct plaque-forming cells (DPFC) to sheep erythrocytes (SRBC), hapten-conjugated SRBC (TNP-SRBC), and horse erythrocytes (TNP-HRBC). Studies in vivo demonstrated that anti-SRBC responses were best enhanced when T. cruz-infected mice were injected with primed T cells derived from normal or infected mice immunized four days previously. The presence of enhancing capacities for DPFC responses by T cells from T. cruzi-infected mice were also supported by experiments examining the hapten-carrier effect. Preimmunization of infected mice with SRBC or HRBC four days before injection of hapten-homologous (TNP-SRBC or TNP-HRBC) carrier resulted in markedly augmented anti-hapten antibody responses. These results show that functional help provided by T cells activated during priming and exposed to a challenge dose of antigen (SRBC) in a time-dependent mode can overcome the effect of immunosuppression in T. cruzi-infected mice.
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    Notes: . Macronuclear DNA from Tetrahymena was examined in order to determine whether the pattern of adenine methylation changed with the transcriptional activity of nearby genes. The DNA from growing, starved and conjugating cells was digested with six restriction enzymes which are sensitive to methylation of adenine within their recognition site. Southern blots of the restricted DNAs were probed with seven cDNA clones and one genomic clone which are homologous to polyA+ RNAs, whose transcriptional activity varies with the physiological state of the cell. One of the cDNA clones, BC11, had not been described previously. It hybridized to a 1.3kb transcript which was present in populations of starved and conjugating, but not in growing cells. On Southern blots of genomic DNA it hybridized to a complex pattern of bands which was highly polymorphic between the DNAs of closely related strains.It was estimated that between 137 and 272 sites were assayed for changes in methylation, including at least 27 sites which were known to be methylated. No differences were seen in the size of restriction fragments from cells in different physiological states. The data suggested that the methylation pattern, which is determined during macronuclear development, does not vary with the physiological state of the cell.
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    Notes: Ortholinea alata n. sp. is described from the northern butterfly fish, Chaetodon rainfordi collected at Heron Island, Great Barrier Reef, Australia. Spherical, disporous trophozoites (10–15 μ) and spores were observed in the lumina of kidney tubules and collecting ducts. Spores are broadly triangular with two short, broad processes that extend dorsoventrad from the posterior end of each of the two spore valves. Valves are bisected by a suture in the plane of the polar capsules. Spores are 12.6 μ (length) × 9.6 μ (width) × 9.9 μ (length), and at the anterior end contain two spherical, divergent polar capsules measuring 4.6 (4.1–5.1) μ. Sporogenesis is similar to that of renal Sphaerospora spp.: the intraluminal trophozoites of O. alata n. sp. correspond to pseudoplasmodia described for Sphaerospora spp. and no large, multinucleate plasmodia are formed. No significant histopathological changes were observed in the kidneys of infected fish.
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  • 92
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    Notes: Sorogena stoianovitchae is an unusual ciliated protozoan with a life cycle characterized by the aggregation of individual trophic cells to form a multicellular sorogen that rises from the liquid culture medium surface by the secretion of a stalk. The noncellular stalk is a tapered, longitudinally furrowed structure composed of a fibrillar matrix that is initially hydrated, but with time dehydrates, the stalk becoming thin and brittle. This dehydration is of importance from the earliest stages of stalk formation since it results in the formation of the outer sheath-like region of the stalk that appears to provide much of the support of the stalk. Cytochemical tests of the stalk for polysaccharides (including acidic mucopolysaccharides) and proteins are positive. Proteolytic enzymes degrade the stalk. Lectins specific for glucose and N-acetyl-D-glucosamine bind to the stalk. Gas chromatography analysis detected the presence of fucose, glucose, glucosamine, and arabinose, as well as a variety of amino acids, predominantly glycine. The cytochemical and biochemical tests, the ultrastructural data, and the behavior of the stalk material suggest that the staik is composed of a matrix of complex protein-polysaccharide molecules.
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    Notes: Nosema disstriae, a parasite of the forest tent caterpillar, Malacosoma disstria, was cultured with cell lines UMN-MDH-1 (Malacosoma disstria), IPLB-1075 (Heliothis zea), and BTC-32 (Triatoma infestans). Infected cultured cells were used to infect the healthy cell lines. Electron micrographs of thin sections of 6-day-old cultures revealed infected cells that exocytosed vesicles containing vegetative and immature sporulating forms of the parasite. Some of these forms were believed to be responsible for intercellular transmission of the parasite. The spread of infection was augmented by culturing the cells at high densities; if the density was too low, there was little or no cross infection. Cross infection was inhibited, but not blocked completely, by high osmolality of the culture medium. The yield of spores from a confluent cell monolayer at the end of growth was generally 1–4 × 107 per ml of culture medium.
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    Notes: The fine structure of the trophozoite of Acanthamoeba palestinensis with a special emphasis on the Golgi complex, microbodies, and mitochondria has been examined. Golgi complexes are distributed throughout the cytoplasm but are most abundant in the perinuclear region. Usually two Goigi complexes are found in the same plane on opposite sides of the nucleus. One of them appears to be in an intimate association with the nuclear membrane. The region of contact contains compact cisternae, vesicles of various sizes, as well as granular and amorphous electron-dense material. Structural changes in the nuclear envelope are also observed in this area. A structure consisting of a Golgi complex and electron-dense microtubule organizing center, comparable to the centrosphere of other Acanthamoeba species, has been observed. Microbodies, surrounded by a single unit membrane and containing a granular matrix and tubular inclusions, are scattered throughout the cytoplasm. These organelles, circular (∼1 μm in diameter) or ovoidal (∼1 μm in length and ∼0.5 μm in width) in section, have often an irregular outline. These microbodies are probably the morphological equivalent of peroxisomes and glyoxysomes. Most mitochondria show a typical structure including tubular cristae and intracristal inclusions. Occasionally mitochondria with two apposed double membranes running through the midline are found. Such atypical cristae have never been reported in small amoebae before.
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    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Heavy infections with enigmatic mobile organisms have recently been found in the blood of carp (Cyprinus carpio) in Central Europe. The organisms measure up to 15 μm, are variable in shape, and exhibit an unceasing twitching or dancing movement. Their developmental cycle starts with a primary cell enclosing a secondary cell. The former grows while the latter produces inside itself by a series of binary fissions and internal cleavages up to eight secondary cells, each of which encloses an inner (tertiary) cell of its own. In addition, up to four tiny cells with compact nuclei (“residual bodies”) also result from divisions of the secondary cells. Primary cells containing the products of the division of secondary cells finally disintegrate, releasing the secondary cells, which in their turn become new primary cells and repeat the cycle all over again. The structure and behavior of these organisms were so incompatible with existing ideas on myxosporean development that their myxosporean affinity was at first unrecognized. The final proof of their identity–appearance of myxosporean spores in sterile, experimentally infected hosts–is still to be presented. The interpretation of the myxosporean features of their life cycle (i.e., [1] the pericyte nature of the primary cell, [2] proliferation by disintegration of the pseudoplasmodial primary cell, [3] no rigidly fixed pattern in vegetative development), their ultrastructure (i.e., [1] characteristic bundles of microtubules and numerous free ribosomes in secondary cells, [2] lack of centrioles, [3] membranes enclosing the secondary cells within the primary cells), and facts on their epizootiology (i.e., [1] no success at transmission via leeches, [2] the occurrence of these organisms along with Sphaerospora renicola Dykova and Lom) suggest that they are stages of S. renicola from the kidney of carp. Similar mobile organisms were found in the blood of fry of two other fishes (Gobio gobi and Tinca tinca) which are also hosts for a Sphaerospora that infects the kidney. This suggests that these organisms represent an early phase in the developmental cycle in the genus Sphaerospora. The existence of cells enveloped one within the other (secondary and tertiary cells) in the developmental cycle, a characteristic myxosporean feature itself, is an intriguing parallel to similarly enclosed cells in sporogenesis of Paramyxea (Ascetospora).
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  • 97
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 30 (1983), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The morphology and morphogenesis of the kinetofragminophoran soil ciliates, Fuscheria terricola n. sp. and Spathidium muscorum Dragesco & Dragesco-Kerneis, 1979, are described. Stained specimens (protargol) are characterized biometrically. The new species differs from the other species of the genus in its body size, body shape, number of kineties, length of extrusomes, and habitat. Both species have telokinetal stomatogenesis, which commences with a proliferation of kinetosomes at those kineties which bear the brosse. Fuscheria terricola does not have a complex perioral ciliature; indeed, it might be that this species has only monokinetids. Thus only a proliferation of kinetosomes and the separation of the kineties takes place in the prospective division furrow. In contrast, S. muscorum differentiates short dikinetid kinetofragments in the region of the division furrow, which are arranged to form the perioral kinety of the opisthe in the intermediate and late stages of the stomatogenesis. The right part of the perioral kinety develops first. This and other studies show that telokinetal stomatogenesis proceeds very differently depending on the differentiation of the oral ciliature; however, detailed studies on the morphogenesis of kinetofragminophoran ciliates are still too few in number for subtypes to be defined.
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  • 98
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 30 (1983), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The apicomplexan family Barrouxiidae Léger, 1911 is reviewed and revised on the basis of present information. It includes the genera Barrouxia Schneider, 1885 with ten named species, Defretinella Henneré, 1966 with one named species, and Goussia Labbé, 1896 with 25 named species. The family is characterized by having bivalved sporocysts with a longitudinal suture line. Available information, admittedly spotty, is given for each species on oocyst, sporocyst and sporozoite structure, and on locus of sporulation. The following seven new combinations are made: Goussia flaviviridis (Setna & Bana, 1935) n. comb. in the gecko Hemidactylus flaviviridis; G. hyalina (Léger, 1898) n. comb. in an unidentified aquatic beetle; G. lacazei (Labbé, 1895) n. comb. in the centipedes Lithobius forficatus and L. martini; G. metchnikovi (Laveran, 1897) n. comb. in the gobies Gobio gobio and G. albipinnatus; G. schaudinniana (Pinto, 1928) n. comb. in the centipede Lithobius forficatus; G. stankovitchi (Pinto, 1928) n. comb. in the small bleak Alburnus alburnus, the bream Abramis brama, and the red roach Scardinius erythrophthalmus; Goussia sp. (Dogel' Akhmerov, 1959) nov. comb. in the freshwater fish Gnathopogon chankaensis.
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  • 99
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    The @journal of eukaryotic microbiology 30 (1983), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Comparison of the electrophoretic migration patterns of proteins of active 40S and 60S ribosomal subunits isolated from nine amicronucleate strains of Tetrahymena of known phenoset revealed strain dependent differences which correlated with the phenoset classification of these strains as determined by Borden, Whitt & Nanney, who compared isoenzyme patterns.
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  • 100
    ISSN: 1550-7408
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Chromatin from a uninucleate dinoflagellate, Crypthecodinium cohnii, a binucleate dinoflagellate, Peridinium balticum, and a chromophyte, Olisthodiscus luteus, was examined by nuclease digestion and the results were compared to those from vertebrates. Gel analysis of the products of staphylococcal (micrococcal) nuclease digestion revealed a DNA repeat unit of 220(±5) base pairs for O. luteus and 215(±5) for P. balticum. Limit digestion gave a core particle of 140 base pairs, revealing that these longer repeat sizes are due to longer linker regions. No repeating subunit structure was found upon electrophoresis of digests of C. cohnii nuclei. Examination of the DNA fragments produced by DNAse I digestion of nuclei isolated from P. balticum and O. luteus showed the same ladder of ten base multiples as seen in chromatin from other eukaryotes. Examination of the kinetics of digestion by DNAse II of Peridinium chromatin revealed less susceptibility when compared to DNAse I digestions while 70% of Olisthodiscus chromatin and 35% of C. cohnii chromatin was sensitive to DNAse II. These data, taken together with previous results from Euglena, indicate that while algal chromatin is similar to that of higher eukaryotes in regard to DNAse I and II action, it differs in that the linker DNA is longer. In addition, the Hl-like histone from O. luteus and P. balticum is located in the linker DNA as in higher eukaryotes.
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