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The Fine Structure of the Colonial Kinetoplastid Flagellate Cephalothamnium cyclopum Stein
Author(s) -
HITCHEN E. T.
Publication year - 1974
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.1550-7408.1974.tb03645.x
Subject(s) - flagellum , flagellate , biology , anatomy , basal body , microtubule , ultrastructure , minicircle , microbiology and biotechnology , botany , genetics , dna , gene
SYNOPSIS Cell structure, cell adhesion, and stalk formation have been examined by electron microscopy in the colonial flagellate, Cephalothamnium cyclopum. Each cell is obconical or spindle‐shaped, pointed posteriorly and truncated anteriorly. The cell membrane is underlain by epiplasm 0.1 μm thick in the posterior region, but bands of microtubules support the anterior region which is differentiated into a flagellar pocket, oral apparatus and contractile vacuole. Each of 2 flagella, joined a short way above their bases by an interflagellar connective, has a paraxial rod and mastigonemes. One flagellum is free and is important in food gathering while the other is recurrent and lies in a shallow groove on the ventral cell surface but projects posteriorly into the stalk. The basal bodies of these flagella are bipartite structures connected by a pair of striated rootlets with accessory microtubular fibers. The oral apparatus consists of a funnel‐shaped buccal cavity and cytostome. It is supported by helical and longitudinal microtubules and also has nearby striated and microtubular fibers. Possible roles of associated oral vesicles in relation to ingestion are discussed. A reticulate mitochondrion houses a massive kinetoplast which has a fibrillar substructure resembling that of dinoflagellate chromosomes. Adjacent flagellates adhere by laminate extensions of their posterior regions and attach by their recurrent flagella to a communally secreted stalk composed of finely fibrillar material. This study indicates that Cephalothamnium belongs in the order Kinetoplastida, and has many features in common with members of the family Bodonidae.

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