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1 February 2009 Spermiogenesis and Spermatozoon of the Tapeworm Ligula intestinalis (Diphyllobothriidea): Phylogenetic Implications
Céline Levron, Jiljí Sitko, Tomáš Scholz
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Abstract

Using transmission electron microscopy, spermiogenesis and the spermatozoon ultrastructural organization are described in Ligula intestinalis (Linnaeus, 1758) (Diphyllobothriidea), a parasite of the great crested grebe Podiceps cristatus (Linnaeus, 1758). Spermiogenesis starts with the differentiation zone of 2 striated rootlets, 2 centrioles giving rise to 2 flagella, and an intercentriolar body. The latter is composed of 5 electron-dense layers separating 4 electron-lucent layers. In the early stages of spermiogenesis, an electron-dense material is present in the apical region of the differentiation zone. Later, the flagella undergo a rotation and fuse with the cytoplasmic extension in a proximo-distal process. The spermatozoon contains 2 axonemes with a 9 “1” trepaxonematan pattern, the nucleus, the cortical microtubules, and an electron-dense zone. The spermatozoon anterior extremity in L. intestinalis is characterized by the absence of crested bodies and a ring of electron-dense cortical microtubules. Some characters of spermiogenesis and spermatozoon in L. intestinalis confirm the recent splitting of “Pseudophyllidea” into 2 new orders, i.e., Bothriocephalidea and Diphyllobothriidea. The process of spermiogenesis is similar in both orders for the “type I” of spermiogenesis and the presence of electron-dense material. However, the intercentriolar body is clearly more developed in the Diphyllobothriidea than in the Bothriocephalidea. Moreover, these 2 orders seem to differ in the presence or absence of a ring of electron-dense cortical microtubules in the anterior extremity of the spermatozoon.

Céline Levron, Jiljí Sitko, and Tomáš Scholz "Spermiogenesis and Spermatozoon of the Tapeworm Ligula intestinalis (Diphyllobothriidea): Phylogenetic Implications," Journal of Parasitology 95(1), 1-9, (1 February 2009). https://doi.org/10.1645/GE-1646.1
Received: 7 April 2008; Accepted: 1 May 2008; Published: 1 February 2009
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