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1 October 2005 DISTRIBUTION OF CRYPTOSPORIDIUM PARVUM SPOROZOITE APICAL ORGANELLES DURING ATTACHMENT TO AND INTERNALIZATION BY CULTURED BILIARY EPITHELIAL CELLS
Steven P. O'Hara, Bing Q. Huang, Xian-Ming Chen, Jeremy Nelson, Nicholas F. LaRusso
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Abstract

Although accumulating evidence supports an active role for host cells during Cryptosporidium parvum invasion of epithelia, our knowledge of the underlying parasite-specific processes triggering such events is limited. In an effort to better understand the invasion strategy of C. parvum, we characterized the presence and distribution of the apical organelles (micronemes, dense granules, and rhoptry) through the stages of attachment to, and internalization by, human biliary epithelia, using serial-section electron microscopy. Novel findings include an apparent organized rearrangement of micronemes upon host cell attachment. The apically segregated micronemes were apposed to a central microtubule-like filamentous structure, and the more distal micronemes localized to the periphery and apical region of the parasite during internalization, coinciding with the formation of the anterior vacuole. The morphological observations presented here extend our understanding of parasite-specific processes that occur during attachment to, and internalization by, host epithelial cells.

Steven P. O'Hara, Bing Q. Huang, Xian-Ming Chen, Jeremy Nelson, and Nicholas F. LaRusso "DISTRIBUTION OF CRYPTOSPORIDIUM PARVUM SPOROZOITE APICAL ORGANELLES DURING ATTACHMENT TO AND INTERNALIZATION BY CULTURED BILIARY EPITHELIAL CELLS," Journal of Parasitology 91(5), 995-999, (1 October 2005). https://doi.org/10.1645/GE-495R.1
Received: 8 October 2004; Accepted: 1 February 2005; Published: 1 October 2005
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