Monogeneans and Acanthocephalans' - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Monogeneans and Acanthocephalans'

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Tadpoles 2 phases - External gills & internal gills. ... Definitive host infected - eats intermediate host - cystacanth. 0.5mm. 5mm. Acanthocephalans ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Monogeneans and Acanthocephalans'


1
Monogeneans and Acanthocephalans.
Jo Hamilton Parasitology BS31820
1mm
0.5mm
0.5mm
2
Objectives and learning outcomes.
  • Describe features monogeneans acanthocephalans
    give examples.
  • Recognise life cycles.
  • Appreciate impact on hosts.

3
Monogeneans.
1mm
  • Phylum Platyhelminthes, Class Monogenea.
  • Taxonomy controversial.
  • Totally parasitic - typical platyhelminth
    features.
  • Dorso-ventrally flattened.
  • Acoelomate.
  • Bilaterally symmetrical.
  • Protonephridial excretory system.
  • No definite anus.
  • No respiratory / circulatory system.
  • Usually hermaphrodite.

4
Monogeneans.
  • Ectoparasites.
  • Gills / body surface marine freshwater fish.
  • Amphibians reptiles.
  • One species - mammals, Oculotrema hippopotami
    hippo eye.
  • Mesoparasites? may invade buccal cavity, cloaca
    bladder.

1mm
5
Monogeneans.
1mm
  • Large posterior sucker haptor.
  • Hooks.
  • 10 - 14 marginal.
  • Pair large median hooks
  • hamuli.
  • Haptor adaptations -
  • sucker-like organs.
  • Suckers - sclerites - clamp gill
    filaments.

6
Monogeneans Body plan - Tegument.
  • Syncitial surface layer.
  • Cell bodies sunken in parenchyma.
  • Cytoplasmic bridges.
  • Microvilli.
  • Musculature - outer circular, oblique inner
    longitudinal muscle fibres.

7
Monogeneans Digestive system.
  • Mouth, pharynx bifurcate intestine - no anus.
  • Intestine - intercaecal network.
  • Nutrients also via tegument - physiological
    significance?
  • Specific microhabitats on host
  • Little movement.
  • Adults not transferred host-to-host.
  • Skin some gill dwellers - mucus feeders.
  • Most gill dwellers - blood feeders (brachial
    capillaries).

8
Monogeneans Reproductive system.
  • Hermaphrodite.
  • Vitellaria, ovary, ootype Mehlis' gland
    uterus.
  • Single testis, seminal vesicle muscular penis.
  • Monogeneans often have pair vaginas.
  • May have genito-intestinal canal.

9
Monogeneans Life cycle.
  • Direct development.
  • Monogenea 1 generation. 1 egg 1 adult

10
Monogeneans Life cycle.
  • Eggs - water - hatch.
  • Eggs large.
  • Long filaments - extensions egg envelope.
  • Filaments stick eggs to skin of fish.
  • Or eggs form mass - fish respiratory currents.

11
Monogeneans Life cycle.
  • Hatched egg oncomiracidium.
  • Ciliated larva swims - eyespots haptor.
  • Complex anterior eyes orientation host
    location.
  • Rhabdomeric photoreceptors.
  • Oncomiracidial digestive tract well
    differentiated.
  • Excretory pores formed.
  • Haptor - attachment.
  • Loose ciliated coat.
  • Growth to adult stage more complex haptor.

12
Monogeneans Host location.
  • Evolved host location mechanisms.
  • Eggs produced when fish shoaling.
  • Oncomiracidia hatch during daytime.
  • Respond chemical physical stimuli (e.g. mucus
    respiratory currents - gills).
  • Can locate hosts over short distances.

13
Example 1 Polystoma intergerrimum.
  • Rare - endoparasitic.
  • Adult - bladder of Old World frogs.
  • Repro cycle synchronized with that of host.
  • Worms 4 to 5 years - mature.
  • Dormant until frog enters repro cycle.
  • Gonadotrophins in frog induce parasite
    copulatation oviposition.
  • Eggs - frog's urine.
  • 20 -50 days to hatch - oncomiracidia.
  • Meanwhile frogs spawned tadpoles hatched.

14
Monogeneans Polystoma intergerrimum.
  • Tadpoles 2 phases - External gills internal
    gills.
  • Oncomiracidium attaches external gills -
    neotenic larva.
  • Produces eggs - 20-25 days.
  • Morphologically physiologically different from
    adult.
  • Neotenic larva gills. Adult bladder.
  • Eggs hatch - 15 -20 days larvae attach to
    tadpole gills.

15
Monogeneans Polystoma intergerrimum.
  • No development until tadpoles metamorphose.
  • Resorption of gills - worms migrate over surface
    to bladder via urinary tract.
  • Takes 1 minute.
  • Endogenously programmed.

16
Monogeneans Polystoma nearcticum.
  • P. nearcticum - North American tree frogs.
  • Neotenic form - larvae do develop or migrate
    unlike P. intergerrimum.
  • Enter urogenital tract directly.

17
Example 2 Diplozoon paradoxum.
  • Diplozoon paradoxum - freshwater fish.
  • Adult body 2 individuals fused together.
  • Larva diporpa.
  • No development unless 2 diporpa larvae.
  • Ventral sucker grasps dorsal button.
  • Triggers metamorphosis 2 larvae fused.
  • Intestine through both individuals.
  • Male female reproductive ducts fused.

18
Monogeneans Gyrodactylus.
  • Gyrodactylus sp. - freshwater marine fish).
  • No larvae.
  • Adults viviparous.
  • Polyembryony.
  • Each zygote - 4 groups cells.
  • Each separate larva.
  • Larvae enclosed inside
  • each other - Russian dolls.

0.8mm
19
Monogeneans Gyrodactylus.
  • Adult 0.5 to 0.8 mm long.
  • Haptor - 16 marginal hooks 2 hamuli.
  • Important in fish farms.
  • Increased host contact increase parasite
    population.
  • Wide range hosts guppies trout.

20
Monogeneans Gyrodactylus.
  • Parasite repro cycle crucial.
  • Entire repro cycle on host.
  • Larvae - uterus adult worm.
  • Polyembryony - 4 individuals from single zygote.
  • Rapid increase in parasite numbers.
  • Parasites spread between fish in close contact.
  • Worms can survive short periods off host.

21
Acanthocephalans (Spiny/ thorny-headed worms).
  • Name - Greek Acantha prickle Kephale head.
  • Not commonly encountered.
  • Hosts fish, amphibians, birds, mammals. 
  • Characteristic anterior, protrusible proboscis
    - hooks. 
  • Hence common name.

22
Acanthocephalans history of taxonomy.
  • Recognised beginning 18th century.
  • Koelreuther (1771) - Acanthocephala .
  • Muller (1776) - Echinorhynchus.
  • Rudolphi (1809) - Acanthocephala.
  • Many species described 19th century
    -Echinorhynchus.
  • Position uncertain Aschelminthes?
  • Acanthocephala now separate phylum.

23
Acanthocephalans.
  • Interesting important group.
  • Endoparasites.
  • No gut.
  • Few mm long largest recorded1m?
  • Adult acanthocephalans intestinal parasites of
    vertebrates (fish, rodents birds).
  • Arthropods intermediate hosts (1 mollusc).

24
Acanthocephalans.
  • Adult characteristics
  • Spiny retractable proboscis - attachment.
  • No gut.
  • Pseudocoelomate.
  • A pair of lemnisci.
  • Dioecious.

0.5mm
25
Acanthocephalans Adult morphology.
0.5mm
  • Anterior presoma (proboscis, neck).
  • Main trunk metasoma.
  • Cutuicular partition.
  • Proboscis sheath.
  • Longitudinal circular muscles.
  • 2 hydrostatic systems - main body cavity
    proboscis sheath cavity.

26
Acanthocephalans Adult morphology.
0.5mm
  • Eversion probocis
  • hydrostatic.
  • Proboscis movement
  • lemnisci.

27
Acanthocephalans Body plan.
  • Body wall structure.
  • Absorb nutrients through body wall.
  • 5 major layers
  • epicuticle, cuticle, striped layer, felt layer
    radial layer.
  • Pore canals.
  • In radial layer - lacunar canal system.
  • Lacunar canal system - liquid lipid
    hydrostatic?.

28
Acanthocephalans Body plan.
  • Eutely - members same species same number cells
    in organs.
  • Nuclei in body wall used in taxonomy.
  • Polyploidy also common in nuclei up to 343n (n
    haploid)!

29
Acanthocephalans Excretory system.
  • Absent - some flame cells (protonephridia).

30
Acanthocephalans Reproductive system.
  • Dioecious.
  • Unique repro organs.
  • Male - paired testes, sperm duct, penis
    copulatory bursa.
  • Unicellular cement glands copulation sealing.
  • Female -ovaries (initially in ligament sac)
    ovarian balls in adult.

31
Acanthocephalans Reproductive system.
0.5mm
  • Eggs fertilised in ovarian
  • ball.
  • Complete development
  • in pseudocoelom.
  • Mature eggs
  • uterine bell.
  • Eggs sorted.
  • Immature eggs
  • pseudocoelom.
  • Mature eggs - uterus
  • vagina.

32
Acanthocephalans Life cycle.
  • Life cycle - 25 species.
  • Same basic pattern.
  • Adults in intestine definitive host. 
  • Dioecious.
  • Females - eggs - faeces. 
  • Eggs ingested by an arthropod intermediate
    host.
  • Definitive host infected - eats intermediate host
    - cystacanth.

33
Acanthocephalans Life cycle.
  • Intermediate host - arthropod.
  • 1 exception - mollusc.
  • May involve paratenic hosts.
  • No human infections.
  • Major problems fish farms.
  • Difficult to treat.

34
Acanthocephalans Impact on host.
  • Infection intensity high
  • E.g. 1000 in duck intestine.
  • Reproductive capacity high
  • 10,000,000 eggs per female.
  • Much damage - hooks.

35
Acanthocephalans Impact on host.
  • Polymorphus botulus - no damage intermediate
    crab host.
  • Eider duck (Somateria mollissima) - definitive
    host.
  • 100-750 P. botulus in intestine.
  • Seasonal "outbreaks" of disease mortality.

36
Acanthocephalans Impact on host.
  • Economic importance?
  • P. botulus - sea ducks crabs.
  • But infections in commercial lobsters (Canada).
  • Acquired from crabs?
  • Lobster diet.
  • Cystacanths in lobsters econmic loss.
  • No prevention / control.

37
Summary I.
  • Monogenea
  • Direct life cycle.
  • Mainly ectoparasites.
  • Endoparasite Polystoma intergerrimum. repro
    parasite linked to repro host.
  • Haptor hooks.
  • Hamuli.
  • Economic importance Gyrodactylus sp.

38
Summary II.
  • Acanthocephala
  • Indirect life cycle.
  • Spiny anterior proboscis.
  • Unique repro organs.
  • Uterine bell.
  • Economic importance - Polymorphus botulus.
  • No effective prevention / control.
  • -
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