| Literature DB >> 30005968 |
Gaetano Catanese1, Amalia Grau2, Jose Maria Valencia2, Jose Rafael Garcia-March3, Maite Vázquez-Luis4, Elvira Alvarez4, Salud Deudero4, Susana Darriba5, María J Carballal6, Antonio Villalba7.
Abstract
This study provides morphological and molecular characterization of a new species, Haplosporidium pinnae), very likely responsible for mass mortality of fan mussels, Pinna nobilis, in the Western Mediterranean Sea. The parasite was found in dead or moribund P. nobilis but did not occur in healthy fan mussels from locations that were not affected by abnormal mortality. Histological examination of infected fan mussels showed uninucleate cells of a haplosporidan parasite throughout the connective tissue and hemolymph sinuses of the visceral mass and binucleate cells and, rarely, multinucleate plasmodia were also detected in the connective tissue. Additionally, stages of sporulation occurred in the epithelium of the host digestive gland tubules. Spores were slightly ellipsoidal with a hinged operculum in one pole. Typical haplosporosomes were not found with TEM but vesicles with two concentric membranes resembling haplosporosomes were abundant in the cytoplasm of the multinucleate plasmodia occurring in host digestive gland tubules. SEM analysis showed multiple structures on the spore surface; some spores had two or four long tape-like filaments attached to the spore wall. Phylogenetic analysis based on the SSU rDNA sequence placed this parasite within a large clade including species of the order Haplosporida, not in the Bonamia/Minchinia subclade or the subclade containing most Haplosporidium species, but within a subclade of Haplosporidium sp. from Penaeus vannamei. Our results suggested that H. pinnae and the parasite of P. vannamei may represent a distinct new genus within the order Haplosporida.Entities:
Keywords: Electron microscopy; Endangered species; Histology; Mass mortality; Phylogenetic analysis
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30005968 DOI: 10.1016/j.jip.2018.07.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invertebr Pathol ISSN: 0022-2011 Impact factor: 2.841