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The Fine Structure of Leishmania donovani and the Role of the Kinetoplast in the Leishmania‐Leptomonad Transformation *
Author(s) -
RUDZINSKA MARIA A.,
D'ALESANDRO PHILIP A.,
TRAGER WILLIAM
Publication year - 1964
Publication title -
the journal of protozoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.067
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1550-7408
pISSN - 0022-3921
DOI - 10.1111/j.1550-7408.1964.tb01739.x
Subject(s) - kinetoplast , biology , leishmania donovani , nucleolus , leishmania , microbiology and biotechnology , hamster , extracellular , intracellular , nucleus , minicircle , flagellum , intracellular parasite , parasite hosting , dna , leishmaniasis , genetics , visceral leishmaniasis , gene , world wide web , computer science
SYNOPSIS. An electron microscope study of Leishmania donovani revealed major differences between the intracellular leishmanial and the extracellular leptomonad stages. Parasites were also removed from infected hamster spleen, inoculated into cultures, and examined at intervals during incubation in order to follow changes during the transformation from one stage to the other. Prominent changes are evident primarily in the kinetoplast and the nucleoli after several hours of cultivation when the parasite is in an intermediate stage of transition. The kinetoplast, a composite organelk containing DNA and cristae mitochondriales, is a regular, sausage‐like structure in the leishmanial stage, but becomes irregular and enlarges extensively after a few hours in vitro , developing branches that are mitochondrial in nature and which, very likely, become new mitochondria. In the nucleus, significant nucleolar changes occur. The two homogeneous nucleoli characteristic of the leishmanial stage merge during transformation into one which is larger, less compact, and composed of small centrally located granules about 100 Å in diameter and larger particles over 200 Å in diameter at the periphery. These transformations of the kinetoplast and nucleolus are undoubtedly expressions of adaptive changes in the metabolic pattern of an intracellular parasite transferred to a markedly different extracellular environment of much lower temperature. It was also found that the leishmanial stage of the parasite has two unit membranes which extend over the flagellum and the flagellar pocket; the intermediate stage and the leptomonad have only a single membrane. Furthermore, some leishmanias in spleen cells were found to be covered by a capsule‐like structure formed by the deposition of fine granular material between the two unit membranes. Since two to four organisms were occasionally found within such capsules, it is possible that encapsulation is a preparatory step for reproduction.

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