Premium
Microsporidia of the Genus Trachipleistophora—Causative Agents of Human Microsporidiosis: Description of Trachipleistophora anthropophthera N. Sp. (Protozoa: Microsporidia)
Author(s) -
Vávra Jiří,
Yachnis Anthony T.,
Shadduck John A.,
Orenstein Jan M.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
journal of eukaryotic microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.067
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1550-7408
pISSN - 1066-5234
DOI - 10.1111/j.1550-7408.1998.tb04536.x
Subject(s) - microsporidia , biology , vesicle , spore , protozoa , ultrastructure , microsporidiosis , anatomy , microbiology and biotechnology , pancreas , biochemistry , genetics , membrane
Trachipleistophora anthropophthera n. sp., was found at autopsy in the brain of one and in the brain, kidneys, pancreas, thyroid, parathyroid, heart, liver, spleen, lymph nodes, and bone marrow of a second patient with AIDS. The parasite is similar to the recently described T. hominis Hollister, Canning, Weidner, Field. Kench and Marriott, 1996, in having isolated nuclei, meronts with a thick layer of electron dense material on the outer face of their plasmalemma and sporogony during which spores are formed inside a thick‐walled sporophorous vesicle. In contrast to T. hominis , this species is dimorphic as it forms two kinds of sporophorous vesicles and spores: Type I‐round to oval polysporous sporophorous vesicle. 7‐10 μm in size, usually with eight spores (3.7 × 2.0 μm), thick endospores, subterminal anchoring disc and anisofilar polar filaments forming seven thicker and two thinner terminal coils. This type of sporophorous vesicle is associated with 25‐30 nm filaments extending into the host cell cytoplasm. Type II—smaller, bisporous sporophorous vesicle (4‐5 times 2.2‐2.5 μm) with two, nearly round, thin‐walled spores, 2.2‐2.5 × 1.8‐2.0 μm in size, having 4‐5 isofilar coils. No outside filamentous elements are associated with the bisporous sporophorous vesicle. Both types of sporophorous vesicles were common in the infected brain tissue and could be found within the same cell. The newly described species, together with T. hominis and previously reported Pleistophora ‐like parasites from human muscle, likely represent a group of closely related human microsporidia.