The endogenous development of Isospora suis Biester 1934 is described in piglets inoculated with 150,000 or 200,000 sporulated oocysts. Endogenous stages developed within villous epithelial cells throughout the small intestine. Two distinct types of meronts were seen in tissue sections. Type I meronts, which were seen at 3 days postinoculation, were binucleate, elongate, and 10.5 by 4.7 micron. They produced two to 14 Type I merozoites per parasitophorous vacuole. Type I merozoites were 10.0 by 3.6 micron. They produced two to 14 Type I merozoites per parasitophorous vacuole. Type I merozoites were 10.0 by 3.6 micron. Type II meronts, which were seen at 4 days postinoculation, were elongate and contained three to 12 nuclei. Type II meronts were 11.4 by 5.3 micron, and one to four were found per parasitophorous vacuole. Type II merozoites were 6.3 by 2.1 micron, and three to 16 were found per parasitophorous vacuole. The peak of asexual development occurred 4 days postinoculation. Fully developed microgamonts, macrogamonts, and oocysts were seen 5 days postinoculation. The prepatent period was 5 days, and the patent period was 5 to 8 days. No extraintestinal stages were seen.
The subspherical to broadly ellipsoidal oocysts of Eimeria macyi measure 16 to 21 by 15 to 19 mu (mean 19.0 by 17.6 mu), and sporocysts measure 10 to 12 by 6 to 8 mu (mean 11.0 by 7.0 mu). The rough walled oocysts lack a micropyle and residuum, but a sporocyst residuum and polar granule are present. This is the first description of coccidian oocysts from the genus Pipistrellus.
The development of the macrogamete of Eimeria mivati Edgar and Seibold 1964 was studied with the electron microscope. Development of the young gamont was characterized by a loss of organelles such as the apical complex, subpellicular microtubules, rhoptries and micronemes, followed by an increase in micropores, mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum (rER), and Golgi complexes. Nuclear detachment bodies and canaliculi were present in maturing macrogamonts. Amylopectin was first observed as small electron-dense rod-like bodies that eventually became large electron-transparent bodies. Type II wall-forming bodies developed in the cisternae of the rER. Type I wall-forming bodies appeared shortly thereafter in close association with numerous Golgi complexes. Many small vesicles located between the cisternae of the rER and the Golgi complexes formed what appeared to be a secretory pathway whereby protein formed in the cisternae and, modified by the Golgi complex, may produce the type I wall body material. The outer wall of the oocyst developed between two distal membranes on the surface of the macrogamete. Although the actual mechanism of deposition of the wall material was not seen, it was probably by some secretory process. Wall-forming bodies did not fuse.
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