Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2046629 | European Journal of Protistology | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Vavraia lutzomyiae (Microsporida; Pleistophoridae) is a new species parasitic in the tropical phlebotomine sandfly, Lutzomyia longipalpis (Diptera, Psychodidae, Phlebotominae), a major vector of Leishmania chagasi in Latin America where human visceral leishmaniasis is endemic. Infected larvae and pupae were parasitized in the abdomen, and some adults were parasitized in Malpighian tubules and midgut. The sporogonial plasmodium divided by multiple divisions into up to 64 uninucleate sporoblasts. These stages were surrounded outside the plasmalemma by a thick, amorphous dense coat and transformed into a merontogenetic sporophorous vesicle within which the sporonts developed into sporoblasts. The mature microsporidian spores were broadly ellipsoidal and measured 6.1±0.43Ã3.1±0.15 μm. The spore wall consisted of a transparent endospore (â¼100 nm) and a thin electron dense exospore (â¼30 nm) with the outer limit slightly undulated. Spores contained a polar filament arranged peripherally in a single layer of eight to nine wide anterior coils (â¼125 nm diameter), and three to four narrow posterior coils (â¼70 nm diameter). Transverse sections revealed a concentric layer organization with the internal layer surrounded by numerous (up to 25) longitudinal microfibrils. The angle of tilt of the polar filament was about 65-68°.
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Authors
Edilson Matos, Ivete Mendonça, Carlos Azevedo,