| Literature DB >> 21854564 |
Anna Ligasová1, Jana Bulantová, Ondřej Sebesta, Martin Kašný, Karel Koberna, Libor Mikeš.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cercariae of schistosomes employ bioactive molecules for penetration into their hosts. These are released from specialized unicellular glands upon stimuli from host skin. The glands were previously well-described in theEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21854564 PMCID: PMC3171358 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-4-162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Glands of the cercaria of . A, schematic figure of the cercaria with highlighted glands; postacetabular glands in green, circumacetabular glands in pink, head gland in blue. B, z-section from CM of cercarial head organ stained with Alexa Fluor® 488 and Cy3-azide; secretory vesicles of postacetabular ducts express bright fluorescence; head gland is in greenish grey. C, three-dimensional model of acetabular glands; Cy3-azide and Alexa Fluor® 488 stained cercaria was employed for the reconstruction; postacetabular glands are in green, circumacetabular glands in red; wide arrow shows acetabulum, thin arrow points to the strangulation of duct bundles entering muscular conus of the head organ (also see Additional File 1). D, visualization of cercarial circumacetabular glands by alizarin and fluorescence microscopy; cercaria was anaesthetized by Procain, acetabulum is exserted; marked are the posterior and anterior circumacetabular gland cells on the right side of cercaria. E, combination of autofluorescence and staining by FITC-phalloidin of the cercaria in CM; arrow points to the area where gland ducts enter the muscular conus; projection series. F, three-dimensional model of cercarial head gland; lobated cercarial head gland (in dark blue) with the three bundles of acetabular gland ducts on each side running through the head gland cell within the head organ (each bundle coloured separately). HG, head gland; dPA, ducts of postacetabular glands; CA-p and CA-a, posterior and anterior circumacetabular cells, respectively; PA and CA, postacetabular and circumacetabular glands, respectively; MC, muscle conus; A, acetabulum.
Figure 2Formation of duct bundles anteriorly from the acetabulum in . Longitudinal section in TEM; ducts of postacetabular and circumacetabular glands are grouped in two lateral bundles which are in a close contact at this point. CA, anterior pair of circumacetabular cells; dPA, postacetabular ducts; dCA, circumacetabular ducts; MC, posterior end of the muscular conus of the head organ; scale bar = 5 μm.
Figure 3Electron micrographs of . A, TEM of postacetabular and circumacetabular ducts reinforced by microtubules (arrows) and surrounded by common muscular layer; scale bar = 500 nm. B, TEM of the section through the apical part of cercarial head organ; yellow arrows show postacetabular ducts, red arrows show circumacetabular ducts and white arrows point to putative ducts of the head gland; note a sensory papilla adjoining with the gland duct opening covered by tegumental folds; scale bar = 5 μm; (also see Additional File 2). C, detail of four gland openings on the head organ of cercaria viewed by SEM; arrows point to sensory papillae in the proximity of the openings; scale bar = 5 μm. D, detail of a postacetabular gland duct in TEM leading to surface opening covered by tegumental folds (wide arrow) on the apex of cercaria, sensory papilla in the proximity of gland duct opening is pointed by thin arrow; scale bar = 2 μm. M, muscular layer; dCA and dPA, ducts of circumacetabular and postacetabular glands, respectively; SP, sensory papilla; HG, head gland; N, nucleus of the head gland.
Figure 4Details from transmission electron microscopy of secretory vesicles from particular glands of . A-C, "classical" method of sample treatment; D-F, high-pressure freezing/freeze substitution method. A+D, postacetabular vesicles. B+E, circumacetabular vesicles. C+F, vesicles in the head gland. N, nuclei of muscle cells surrounded by the head gland cell. Scale bars = 500 nm.
Results of the estimations of relative and absolute volumes of cercarial body and glands
| TEM + CM stereology | CM stereology | CM voxel counting | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14.4% | 19.5% ± 3.3% | 18.7% ± 5.4% | |
| 70065 ± 4491 | 94114 ± 3106 (fixed) | 107372 ± 5798 | |
| 136570 ± 4507 (live) | |||
| 12% | 12.5% ± 3.5% | 15.2% ± 5% | |
| 58255 ± 3734 | 60330 ± 2112 (fixed) | 87275 ± 4364 | |
| 87545 ± 3064 (live) | |||
| 6% | ND | ND | |
| 29258 ± 1875 | |||
| 487415 ± 31240 (fixed) | 482637 ± 159753 (fixed) | 574180 ± 197518 (fixed) | |
| 700360 ± 158982 (live) | |||
Columns represent particular methods used for estimations. Relative volumes are indicated as percent of total volume of cercarial body (excluding tail). Absolute volumes are expressed in μm3 ± standard deviation. TEM, sections under transmission electron microscope; CM, optical sections under confocal microscope; ND, not determined.