AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper presents the first ultrastructural analysis of sperm cells in two parasitic species, Bianium plicitum and Bianium arabicum, which infect specific fish caught in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
  • Using transmission electron microscopy, the study reveals common structural features in their spermatozoa consistent with known patterns in the Lepocreadioidea group, including two axonemes, two mitochondria, a nucleus, and unique cortical microtubules.
  • Notable differences between the two species include variations in the position of the first mitochondrion, the length of the cortical microtubules, and the sequence in which cellular structures disappear towards the sperm's rear, confirming a distinctive yet general design in the

Article Abstract

We present in this paper the first ultrastructural study of the spermatozoon of species of the genus Bianium Stunkard, 1930, namely Bianium plicitum and Bianium arabicum belonging to the family Lepocreadiidae. Specimens are parasites of the tetraodontid teleosts Lagocephalus laevigatus caught in the Atlantic Ocean and Lagocephalus sceleratus caught in Pacific Ocean, respectively. Live worms were fixed and processed for transmission electron microscopy. Observations of numerous cross and longitudinal sections of the spermatozoa of B. plicitum and B. arabicum demonstrated the general pattern described in all previously studied Lepocreadioidea, namely two axonemes with 9+ "1" pattern of Trepaxonemata, two mitochondria, a nucleus, parallel cortical microtubules, and an external ornamentation of the plasma membrane associated with spine-like bodies. The maximum number of cortical microtubules and the external ornamentation were not located at the anterior extremity of the spermatozoon but at a more posterior level, as in all the species of Lepocreadioidea studied to date. Differences observed between spermatozoa of B. plicitum and B. arabicum were observed in: (1) the location of the first mitochondrion, (2) size of cortical microtubules which were longer in B. arabicum than in B. plicitum, and (3) the order of the disappearance of the axonemes, mitochondrion, and cortical microtubules toward the posterior region of the spermatozoon. Only the nucleus reaches into the posterior extremity of the spermatozoon in these two species. The general pattern of the spermatozoon described in these two species exhibit the general model in the genus Bianium.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00436-015-4604-yDOI Listing

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