scholarly journals Female genital structures in several families of Centropagoidea (Copepoda: Calanoida)

1998 ◽  
Vol 353 (1369) ◽  
pp. 721-736 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roxane-M. Barthélémy ◽  
Corinne Cuoc ◽  
Danielle Defaye ◽  
Michel Brunet ◽  
Jacques Mazza

The female genital structures of 21 calanoid species belonging to the families Candaciidae, Centropagidae, Pontellidae, Sulcanidae, Temoridae and Tortanidae were studied using light and electron microscopy (scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy). Except the monotypic Sulcanidae, their organization conforms to a common pattern characterized by egg–laying ducts opening through paired adjacent gonopores into a small cavity, the genital atrium, covered by a genital operculum and opening to the outside through a distal atrial slit. No seminal receptacle is present and the seminal products must be stored for a brief period in the genital atrium.The genital structures occupy a well delimited genital area, the main changes in which concern their position on the ventral face of the genital double–somite, and operculum morphology. Their organization and possible mode of operation are compared with those of other calanoid families. A possible correlation between absence of seminal receptacles and mating behaviour is discussed.

Author(s):  
J. M. Cowley

The comparison of scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) with conventional transmission electron microscopy (CTEM) can best be made by means of the Reciprocity Theorem of wave optics. In Fig. 1 the intensity measured at a point A’ in the CTEM image due to emission from a point B’ in the electron source is equated to the intensity at a point of the detector, B, due to emission from a point A In the source In the STEM. On this basis it can be demonstrated that contrast effects In the two types of instrument will be similar. The reciprocity relationship can be carried further to include the Instrument design and experimental procedures required to obtain particular types of information. For any. mode of operation providing particular information with one type of microscope, the analagous type of operation giving the same information can be postulated for the other type of microscope. Then the choice between the two types of instrument depends on the practical convenience for obtaining the required Information.


Tick borne pathogens present a significant health challenge to animals and human because a single tick may transmit multiple pathogens to a mammalian host during feeding. The present study detected tick-borne pathogens from pet dogs. A total of 666 ticks were collected from 144 pet and sheltered dogs in Egypt from April to September 2018. For hemolymph, midgut and salivary gland smears 546 ticks were used as well as 360 egg smears from 120 female tick were examined by light microscope. The infected ticks were prepared for transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Ticks were identified; Rhipicephalus sanguineus. Light microscopy showed infection rates of 44.69%, 68.50% & 15.75%, in hemolymph, midgut and salivary gland, respectively. H. canis recorded the highest rates in hemolymph and midgut (35.89% & 49.82%, respectively), but Theileria spp. was the lowest (0.73% & 2.93%, respectively). In salivary gland smears, Babesia canis. was detected in 13.55% and Theileria spp. in 1.83%. Mixed infection in same tick was recorded in 4.76% &0.37% in midgut and salivary gland smears, respectively. Babesia canis stages were recovered from 15% of egg smears. R. sanguineus was natural infected by Babesia, Theileria, Hepatozoon and Anaplasma phagocytophilum as well as mixed infections of protozoa accompanied by a complicated sign of diseases and failure in accurate diagnosis.


2016 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 142-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Cicero ◽  
T. W. Fisher ◽  
J. K. Brown

The potato psyllid Bactericera cockerelli is implicated as the vector of the causal agent of zebra chip of potato and vein-greening of tomato diseases. Until now, visual identification of bacteria in the genus ‘Candidatus Liberibacter’ has relied on direct imaging by light and electron microscopy without labeling, or with whole-organ fluorescence labeling only. In this study, aldehyde fixative followed by a coagulant fixative, was used to process adult psyllids for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) colloidal gold in situ hybridization experiments. Results indicated that ‘Ca. Liberibacter solanacearum’ (CLso)-specific DNA probes annealed to a bacterium that formed extensive, monocultural biofilms on gut, salivary gland, and oral region tissues, confirming that it is one morphotype of potentially others, that is rod-shaped, approximately 2.5 µm in diameter and of variable length, and has a rough, granular cytosol. In addition, CLso, prepared from shredded midguts, and negatively stained for TEM, possessed pili- and flagella-like surface appendages. Genes implicating coding capacity for both types of surface structures are encoded in the CLso genome sequence. Neither type was seen for CLso associated with biofilms within or on digestive organs, suggesting that their production is stimulated only in certain environments, putatively, in the gut during adhesion leading to multiplication, and in hemolymph to afford systemic invasion.


2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 89-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luciana S. Simões ◽  
Rose E.G. Rici ◽  
Phelipe O. Favaron ◽  
Taís Harumi de Castro Sasahara ◽  
Rodrigo S.N. Barreto ◽  
...  

Abstract: al for both, the establishment of appropriate management systems, and for the use of new species as animal models. In this study, we used light and electron microscopy to characterize the sexual development stages of the guinea pig (Cavia porcellus) in specimens of 30, 45 and 90 days of age. We observed the differentiation of spermatocytes only through transmission electron microscopy in the leptotene, zygotene and pachytene phases of meiosis, in 30-day-old animals. During puberty, there was differentiation of the germinative epithelium and formation of the acrosome. Spermatozoa, however, were not detected. Thus, we could infer that puberty happens after 45 days of age. Sexual maturity was evident in 90-day-old specimens. Our results showed that changes in the testicular germinative epithelium during the postnatal sexual development in guinea pig led to morphological changes, including the ones related to the development of Leydig and Sertoli cells, which are directly related to puberty. In this work, we provide new morphological subsidies for a better understanding of reproductive parameters of this species, enabling its use as an animal model in the field of the reproductive biology.


1996 ◽  
Vol 44 (11) ◽  
pp. 1279-1288 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Antonio ◽  
J M González-García ◽  
J Page ◽  
J A Suja ◽  
J C Stockert ◽  
...  

We analyzed first-metaphase meiotic chromosomes of the grasshopper Chorthippus jucundus by two different methods, i.e., a silver impregnation technique and the osmium tetroxide-p-phenylenediamine (Os-PPD) procedure. The former was applied on squashed testes previously fixed in ethanol-acetic acid, whereas for Os-PPD the material was not subjected to any previous extraction treatment but was fixed in OsO4, treated with PPD, and embedded in Epon 812. Both techniques revealed chromatid cores and kinetochores regardless of the processing of the material (squashed or sectioned). Unstained Os-PPD sections were analyzed by light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The Os-PPD technique provided a high contrast of chromatid cores and kinetochores in relation to the chromatin, which revealed a low electron density. To determine the Os-PPD reaction mechanism, the PAS procedure, as well as scanning electron microscopy (SEM) backscattering and SEM X-ray microanalysis, was performed on sections. By use of the Os-PPD-PAS procedure, glycol groups formed by oxidation of osmium bound to aromatic substrates were detected in chromatid cores and kinetochores by brightfield and fluorescence microscopy. A high Z contrast was detected in these structures by backscattered electron imaging. SEM X-ray microanalysis showed osmium and phosphorus to be the main elements present on the chromatid cores. Taking into account the known reactivity of OsO4 and the present results, the possible participation of nucleic acids as well as proteins in the Os-PPD reaction mechanism and in the composition of chromatid cores and kinetochores is discussed.


Parasitology ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 132 (3) ◽  
pp. 427-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. L. WONG ◽  
G. P. BRENNAN ◽  
D. W. HALTON ◽  
L. H. S. LIM

A study of the anterior adhesive apparatus (head organs) of Bravohollisia gussevi Lim, 1995 was carried out using light and electron microscopy. The anterior adhesive apparatus or head organs in B. gussevi comprise 6 circular openings or apertures in the antero-lateral region, associated pits lined with specialized microvillous tegument that differ from the general body tegument, a bundle of ducts, and uninucleate gland cells located lateral to the pharynx. The uninucleate glands of the anterior adhesive apparatus (head organs) comprise 2 types of cells, one kind of cell producing rod-like bodies (S1) and the other oval bodies (S2). The S1 bodies are filled with numerous, less electron-dense vesicles in an electron-dense matrix, while S2 bodies have no vesicles but contain a more homogeneous electron-dense matrix. Interlinking band-like structures were observed between S1 bodies. Similar band-like structures were found between S2 bodies. The formation of S1 bodies was followed by transmission electron microscopy. However, the formation of S2 bodies was unclear and could not be resolved. Uniciliated structures were also observed around the openings of the anterior adhesive apparatus. Each uniciliated structure is usually associated with an opening of a gland cell producing granular, electron-dense, secretory bodies, which differ from the secretions produced by the lateral gland cells of the anterior adhesive apparatus.


1985 ◽  
Vol 63 (8) ◽  
pp. 1944-1961 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. H. Nicholls ◽  
M. Dürrschmidt

Sixteen taxa of the genera Raphidocystis, Raphidiophrys, and Pompholyxophrys from freshwater habitats in Canada, Chile, and New Zealand were studied by light and electron microscopy. Six taxa are described as new: Raphidocystis glabra, Raphidiophrys minuta, Raphidiophrys orbicularis ssp. orbicularis, R. orbicularis ssp. ovalis, Pompholyxophrys stellata, and P. ossea. New information on scale structure and arrangement based on scanning and transmission electron microscopy amplifies the taxonomic descriptions of Raphidiophrys ambigua, R. pallida, R. elegans, R. intermedia, R. marginata, R. symmetrica, Pompholyxophrys punicea, P. exigua, and P. ovuligera, which were previously imperfectly known by light microscopy only.


1970 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 319-331 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anders Hamberger ◽  
Hans-Arne Hansson ◽  
Johan Sjöstrand

Freehand, isolated neuronal perikarya from the hypoglossal nucleus of the rabbit have been examined with light-and electron-microscopy (transmission and scanning). The surface of the cell bodies was largely covered with spherical particles which were 0.5–2 µ in diameter. Transmission electron microscopy proved that the spherical particles were synaptic nerve terminals. Crush of the hypoglossal nerve which leads to chromatolysis and swelling of the neuronal cell bodies results in a conspicuous reduction in the number of terminals attached to the surface of hypoglossal neurons. This effect was observed both for isolated neurons and in tissue sections. The effect is considered in relation to earlier reported variations in the adherence of neuropil to isolated neuronal perikarya. The functional importance of nerve ending detachment in connection with nerve injury is discussed.


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