Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-23T16:45:20.218Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The histochemistry of the cystogenous gland cells and cyst wall of Parorchis acanthus Nicoll, and some details of the morphology and fine structure of the cercaria

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Gwendolen Rees
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University College of Wales, Aberystwyth

Extract

The cyst wall of Parorchis acanthus Nicoll, consists of an outer wall of three layers and an inner wall of two layers. The outer wall is hemispherical, complete, attached to the substratum and extends as a flange around the margin. The composition of its three layers differ dorsally and ventrally. Dorsally the layers are: (1) acid mucopolysaccharide and neutral mucopolysaccharide, (2) protein and lipoprotein, (3) acid mucopolysaccharide, neutral mucopolysaccharide and glyco-protein. Ventrally the layers are: (1) acid mucopolysaccharide, protein and lipoprotein, (2) acid mucopolysaccharide. The middle layer in both is secreted by the ventral granular cystogenous glands and the outer and inner layers, dorsally and ventrally, by the dorsal and ventral agranular cystogenous glands respectively.

The inner cyst wall is oval in surface view. It consists of two layers, both of neutral mucopolysaccharide, the outer giving a more pronounced reaction. Both are secreted by the dorsal granular cystogenous glands. The ventral wall is strengthened by a secretion from the plug-forming gland cells and consists of neutral mucopolysaccharide. All the layers of the cyst wall show the same histochemical reactions as the glands which secrete them.

Studies on the fine structure of the cercaria have revealed mammalian-type synapses in the neuropile of the central nervous system, rind cells around the ganglia, an elaborate arrangement of muscles in the wall of the oral sucker, the flame cell structure and the structure of the granules contributing to the formation of the cyst wall.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Alicata, J. E. (1938). Observations on the life history of Fasciola gigantica, the common liver fluke of cattle in Hawaii, and the intermediate host, Fossaria ollula. Bull. Hawaii agri. Exp. Stn. no. 80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonsdorff, C. H. von & Telkkä, A. (1966). The flagellar structure of the flame cell in fish tapeworm (Diphyllobothrium latum). Z. Zellforsch. mikrosk. Anat. 70, 169–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cardell, R. R. & Philpott, D. E. (1960). The ultrastructure of the tail of the cercaria of Himasthla quissetensis (Miller and Northup, 1926). Trans. Am. microsc. Soc. 79, 442–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dawes, B. (1961). On the early stages of Fasciola hepatica penetrating into the liver of an experimental host, the mouse. A histological picture. J. Helminth. 35 (R. T. Leiper Suppl.), 4152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dixon, K. E. (1965). The structure and histochemistry of the cyst wall of the metacercaria of Fasciola hepatica L. Parasitology 55, 215–26.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dixon, K. E. & Mercer, E. H. (1964). The fine structure of the cyst wall of the metacercaria of Fasciola hepatica. Q. Jl microsc. Sci. 105, 385–9.Google Scholar
Gray, E. G. (1964). Tissue of the central nervous system. In Electron Microscopic Anatomy, pp. 369417. Ed. Kuntz., S. M.New York: Academic Press Inc.Google Scholar
Herber, E. C. (1950). Studies on the biochemistry of cyst envelopes of the fluke, Notocotylus urbanensis. Proc. Pa Acad. Sci. 24, 140–2.Google Scholar
Kruidenier, F. J. (1959). Ultrastructure of the excretory system of cercariae. J. Parasit. 45 (Sect. 2, suppl.), 59. (Abstr.)Google Scholar
Kümmel, G. (1958). Das Terminalorgan der Protonephridien, Feinstruktur und Deutung der Funktion. Z. Naturf. 136, 676–9.Google Scholar
Lengy, G. (1960). Study on Paramphistomum microbothrium Fischolder, 1901, a rumen parasite of cattle in Israel. Bull. Res. Coun. Israel (Sect. B), 9, 71130.Google Scholar
Lenhoff, H. M., Schroeder, R. & Leigh, W. H. (1960). The collagen-like nature of meta cercarial cysts of a new species of Ascocotyle. J. Parasit. 46 (Sect. 2, suppl.), 36, (Abstr.)Google Scholar
Lynch, D. L. & Bogitsh, B. J. (1962). The chemical nature of metacercarial cysts. 11. Biochemical investigations on the cyst of Posthodiplostomum minimum. J. Parasit. 48, 241–3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, W. E. (1956). The life cycle of Catatropis johnstoni n.sp. (Trematoda: Notocotylidae). Trans. Am. microsc. Soc. 75, 117–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McManus, J. F. A. (1946). Histological demonstration of mucin after periodic acid. Nature, Lond. 158, 202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pantelouris, E. M. & Threadgold, L. T. (1963). The excretory system of the adult Fasciola hepatica L. Cellule 64, 63–7.Google ScholarPubMed
Pearse, A. G. E. (1961). Histochemistry: Theoretical and Applied, 998 pp., 2nd ed.London: J. and A. Churchill Ltd.Google Scholar
Rees, G. (1937). The anatomy and encystment of Cercaria purpurae Lebour, 1911. Proc. zool. Soc. Lond. 107, 6573.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rees, G. (1966). Light and electron microscope studies of the redia of Parorchis acanthus Nicoll. Parasitology 56, 589602.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Senft, A. W., Delbert, E. P. & Pelofsky, A. H. (1961). Electron microscope observations of the integument, flame cells, and gut of Schistosoma mansoni. J. Parasit. 47, 217–29.Google Scholar
Singh, K. S. & Lewert, R. M. (1959). Observations on the formation and chemical nature of metacercarial cysts of Notocotylus urbanensis. J. infect. Dis. 104, 138–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sinitsin, D. F. (1933). Studien uber die Phylogenie der Trematoden. VI. The life histories of some American liver flukes. Z. ParasitKde. 6, 170–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thapar, G. S. & Tandon, R. S. (1952). On the life history of liver fluke, Fasciola gigantica Cobbold, 1855 in India. Indian J. Helminth. 4, 77112.Google Scholar
Wesenberg-Lund, C. (1934). Contributions to the development of the Trematoda Digenea. Part II. The biology of the freshwater cercariae in Danish fresh waters. K. danske Vidensk Selsk. Skr. 9, 5, 223 pp.Google Scholar
Wright, W. R. (1927). Studies on larval trematodes from North Wales. Part I. Observations on the rediae, cercaria and cyst of Fasciola hepatica. Ann. trop. Med. Parasit. 21, 4756.CrossRefGoogle Scholar