Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy

Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy. International Journal for Parasitology 16: 205-216. When viewed by scanning electron microscopy, the surfaces of Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strain...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: P. Sobhon, T. Koonchornboon, H. C. Yuan, E. S. Upatham, P. Saitongdee, M. Krautrachue, P. Bubphaniroj, P. Vongpayabal
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/9757
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Mahidol University
id th-mahidol.9757
record_format dspace
spelling th-mahidol.97572018-02-27T11:29:39Z Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy P. Sobhon T. Koonchornboon H. C. Yuan E. S. Upatham P. Saitongdee M. Krautrachue P. Bubphaniroj P. Vongpayabal Mahidol University Medical Center of Fudan University Immunology and Microbiology Medicine Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy. International Journal for Parasitology 16: 205-216. When viewed by scanning electron microscopy, the surfaces of Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains of S. japonicum are highly spongy and consist of ridges and papillae. Among males there are differences in the number and distribution of papillae and the pattern of ridges. Three kinds of papillae were observed: (1) the large fungiform papillae (3-4 μm in diameter, most without cilia) are more numerous in Philippine and Indonesian strains; they concentrate on the lateral aspect of the anterior and middle parts close to the edges of the gynecophoral canal, and on the latero-dorsal aspect of the posterior part and the tail; (2) in all strains, small ciliated hemispherical papillae (1.5-2 μm in diameter) are numerous, especially in and around the suckers, the gynecophoral canal, and on the tail, elsewhere they are evenly distributed; (3) the cratered papillae (3-4 μm in diameter, about half bearing cilia) are most numerous in the Indonesian strain but are very few in the Chinese strain; they concentrate on the lateral aspect of the middle part and on the edges of the gynecophoral canal. Ridges (about 0.2-0.6 μm in width) are long, thin, wavy and least branching in the Chinese strain. They are thicker and more branching in the Philippine and Indonesian strains. Furthermore, in the latter two there are leaf-like projections and microvilli on the posterior half of the body surface; these cover a greater area of tegument in the Indonesian strain. Spines are present only on the tail end; they are large and more numerous in the Philippine and Indonesian strains. In contrast to males, the surfaces of females are relatively similar. There are spines on all areas except the most anterior end where a large number of long cilia are present. Fungiform papillae are more numerous on females of the Philippine and Indonesian strains, and they concentrate on the latero-dorsal aspects of the middle and posterior parts and around the excretory pore. Ridges in all females are not so well developed and are present only in the middle part of the body. © 1986. 2018-02-27T04:28:31Z 2018-02-27T04:28:31Z 1986-01-01 Article International Journal for Parasitology. Vol.16, No.3 (1986), 205-216 10.1016/0020-7519(86)90045-7 00207519 2-s2.0-0022727508 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/9757 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=0022727508&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Immunology and Microbiology
Medicine
spellingShingle Immunology and Microbiology
Medicine
P. Sobhon
T. Koonchornboon
H. C. Yuan
E. S. Upatham
P. Saitongdee
M. Krautrachue
P. Bubphaniroj
P. Vongpayabal
Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
description Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy. International Journal for Parasitology 16: 205-216. When viewed by scanning electron microscopy, the surfaces of Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains of S. japonicum are highly spongy and consist of ridges and papillae. Among males there are differences in the number and distribution of papillae and the pattern of ridges. Three kinds of papillae were observed: (1) the large fungiform papillae (3-4 μm in diameter, most without cilia) are more numerous in Philippine and Indonesian strains; they concentrate on the lateral aspect of the anterior and middle parts close to the edges of the gynecophoral canal, and on the latero-dorsal aspect of the posterior part and the tail; (2) in all strains, small ciliated hemispherical papillae (1.5-2 μm in diameter) are numerous, especially in and around the suckers, the gynecophoral canal, and on the tail, elsewhere they are evenly distributed; (3) the cratered papillae (3-4 μm in diameter, about half bearing cilia) are most numerous in the Indonesian strain but are very few in the Chinese strain; they concentrate on the lateral aspect of the middle part and on the edges of the gynecophoral canal. Ridges (about 0.2-0.6 μm in width) are long, thin, wavy and least branching in the Chinese strain. They are thicker and more branching in the Philippine and Indonesian strains. Furthermore, in the latter two there are leaf-like projections and microvilli on the posterior half of the body surface; these cover a greater area of tegument in the Indonesian strain. Spines are present only on the tail end; they are large and more numerous in the Philippine and Indonesian strains. In contrast to males, the surfaces of females are relatively similar. There are spines on all areas except the most anterior end where a large number of long cilia are present. Fungiform papillae are more numerous on females of the Philippine and Indonesian strains, and they concentrate on the latero-dorsal aspects of the middle and posterior parts and around the excretory pore. Ridges in all females are not so well developed and are present only in the middle part of the body. © 1986.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
P. Sobhon
T. Koonchornboon
H. C. Yuan
E. S. Upatham
P. Saitongdee
M. Krautrachue
P. Bubphaniroj
P. Vongpayabal
format Article
author P. Sobhon
T. Koonchornboon
H. C. Yuan
E. S. Upatham
P. Saitongdee
M. Krautrachue
P. Bubphaniroj
P. Vongpayabal
author_sort P. Sobhon
title Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
title_short Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
title_full Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
title_fullStr Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of the surface morphology of adult Schistosoma japonicum (Chinese, Philippine and Indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
title_sort comparison of the surface morphology of adult schistosoma japonicum (chinese, philippine and indonesian strains) by scanning electron microscopy
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/9757
_version_ 1763488665003098112