Literature DB >> 18627867

Spermiogenesis in Seison nebaliae (Rotifera, Seisonidea): further evidence of a rotifer-acanthocephalan relationship.

M Ferraguti1, G Melone.   

Abstract

The spermatozoa of Seison nebaliae are filiform cells about 70 mum long with a diameter of 0.6 mum. They have a slightly enlarged head, 2.5 mum long, followed by a long cell body. The flagellum starts from the head, and runs parallel to the cell body, contained in a groove along it. The head contains an acrosome, two large, paired para-acrosomal bodies, the basal body of the flagellum and the anterior thin extremity of the nucleus. The cell body contains the main portion of the nucleus, a single mitochondrion located in its distal portion, and many accessory bodies with different shapes. The flagellum has a 9 + 2 axoneme. The study of spermiogenesis shows the Golgian origin of the acrosome and the para-acrosomal bodies and reveals some peculiarities: a folding of the perinuclear cisterna is present between the proacrosome and the basal body of the flagellum in early spermatids and the flagellum runs in a canal inside the spermatid cytoplasm. The basal body migrates anteriorly. These characters are shared partly by the Rotifera Monogononta and, to a large extent, by the Acanthocephala studied so far. Many details of the spermiogenetic process are identical to those of Acanthocephala, thus suggesting that the processes in the two taxa are homologous.

Entities:  

Year:  1999        PMID: 18627867     DOI: 10.1054/tice.1999.0012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tissue Cell        ISSN: 0040-8166            Impact factor:   2.466


  2 in total

1.  Transcriptome data reveal Syndermatan relationships and suggest the evolution of endoparasitism in Acanthocephala via an epizoic stage.

Authors:  Alexandra R Wey-Fabrizius; Holger Herlyn; Benjamin Rieger; David Rosenkranz; Alexander Witek; David B Mark Welch; Ingo Ebersberger; Thomas Hankeln
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-02-10       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Genomics and transcriptomics of epizoic Seisonidea (Rotifera, syn. Syndermata) reveal strain formation and gradual gene loss with growing ties to the host.

Authors:  Katharina M Mauer; Hanno Schmidt; Marco Dittrich; Andreas C Fröbius; Sören Lukas Hellmann; Hans Zischler; Thomas Hankeln; Holger Herlyn
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2021-08-09       Impact factor: 3.969

  2 in total

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