Literature DB >> 18774647

Fasciola hepatica: Histology of the testis in egg-producing adults of several laboratory-maintained isolates of flukes grown to maturity in cattle and sheep and in flukes from naturally infected hosts.

R E B Hanna1, H Edgar, D Moffett, S McConnell, I Fairweather, G P Brennan, A Trudgett, E M Hoey, L Cromie, S M Taylor, R Daniel.   

Abstract

A total of 8 calves approximately 6 months old and 22 lambs of similar age were infected with metacercariae of Fasciola hepatica of various laboratory-maintained isolates including: Cullompton (sensitive to triclabendazole) and Sligo, Oberon and Leon (reported as resistant to triclabendazole). Ten to 16 weeks after infection, flukes were harvested from these experimental animals and the histology of the testis tissue was examined in a representative sample of flukes from each population. Adult wild-type flukes were also collected from 5 chronically infected cattle and 7 chronically infected sheep identified at post-mortem inspection. The testis tissue of these flukes was compared with that of the various laboratory-maintained isolates. Whilst the testes of the wild-type, Oberon and Leon flukes displayed all the usual cell types associated with spermatogenesis in Fasciola hepatica (spermatogonia, spermatocytes, spermatids and mature sperm), the Cullompton flukes from both cattle and sheep showed arrested spermatogenesis, with no stages later than primary spermatocytes represented in the testis profiles. The presence of numerous eosinophilic apoptotic bodies and nuclear fragments suggested that meiotic division was anomalous and incomplete. In contrast to the wild-type flukes, no mature spermatozoa were present in the testes or amongst the shelled eggs in the uterus. A high proportion of the eggs collected from these flukes hatched to release normal-appearing miracidia after an appropriate incubation period, as indeed was the case with all isolates examined and the wild-type flukes. It is concluded that the eggs of Cullompton flukes are capable of development without fertilization, i.e. are parthenogenetic. The implications of this for rapid evolution of resistant clones following an anthelmintic selection event are discussed. Amongst the Sligo flukes examined, two subtypes were recognised, namely, those flukes with all stages of spermatogenesis and mature spermatozoa present in the testes (type 1), and those flukes with all stages of spermatogenesis up to spermatids present, but no maturing spermatozoa in the testes (type 2). Each sheep infected with the Sligo isolate had both type 1 (approximately 60%) and type 2 (approximately 40%) flukes present in the population. Spermatozoa were found amongst the eggs in the uterus in 64% of flukes and this did not necessarily reflect the occurrence of spermatozoa in the testis profiles of particular flukes, suggesting that cross-fertilization had occurred. The apparent disruption of meiosis in the spermatocytes of the Cullompton flukes is consistent with reports that Cullompton flukes are triploid (3n=30), whereas the Sligo and wild-type flukes are diploid (2n=20). In the Sligo flukes the populations are apparently genetically heterogenous, with a proportion of the flukes unable to produce fully formed spermatozoa perhaps because of a failure in spermiogenesis involving elongation of the nucleus during morphogenesis.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18774647     DOI: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2008.07.022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Parasitol        ISSN: 0304-4017            Impact factor:   2.738


  6 in total

1.  Fasciola hepatica: disruption of spermatogenesis by the fasciolicide compound alpha.

Authors:  Maeve McConville; Robert E B Hanna; Gerard P Brennan; Maurice McCoy; Hillary W J Edgar; Shirley McConnell; Rafael Castillo; Alicia Hernández-Campos; Ian Fairweather
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2009-11-18       Impact factor: 2.289

2.  Fasciola hepatica: time-dependent disruption of spermatogenesis following in vivo treatment with triclabendazole.

Authors:  Emma Toner; Gerard P Brennan; Robert E B Hanna; Hillary W J Edgar; Ian Fairweather
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2011-05-04       Impact factor: 2.289

Review 3.  Fasciola hepatica: Histology of the Reproductive Organs and Differential Effects of Triclabendazole on Drug-Sensitive and Drug-Resistant Fluke Isolates and on Flukes from Selected Field Cases.

Authors:  Robert Hanna
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2015-06-26

4.  Pathogenicity and virulence of the liver flukes Fasciola hepatica and Fasciola Gigantica that cause the zoonosis Fasciolosis.

Authors:  Richard Lalor; Krystyna Cwiklinski; Nichola Eliza Davies Calvani; Amber Dorey; Siobhán Hamon; Jesús López Corrales; John Pius Dalton; Carolina De Marco Verissimo
Journal:  Virulence       Date:  2021-12       Impact factor: 5.882

5.  Molecular characterization of a novel GSTO2 of Fasciola hepatica and its roles in modulating murine macrophages.

Authors:  Xifeng Wang; Chunguang Zhao; Guowu Zhang; Kai Zhang; Zhiyuan Li; Yunxia Shang; Chengcheng Ning; Chunhui Ji; Xianzhu Xia; Xuepeng Cai; Jun Qiao; Qingling Meng
Journal:  Parasite       Date:  2022-03-22       Impact factor: 3.000

6.  Fasciola hepatica demonstrates high levels of genetic diversity, a lack of population structure and high gene flow: possible implications for drug resistance.

Authors:  Nicola J Beesley; Diana J L Williams; Steve Paterson; Jane Hodgkinson
Journal:  Int J Parasitol       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 3.981

  6 in total

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