The function of calcareous bodies, commonly found in the parenchyma of cestodes and trematodes, is relatively poorly understood. The present histochemical ultrastructural study of the proliferative tetrathyridia of Mesocestoides vogae revealed that calcareous corpuscles begin to form as organic (lipid-protein) masses that coalesce in parenchymal (calcareogenic) cells. Concentric accretion of organic and inorganic crystalline material then leads to the formation of typical refractile calcareous bodies. The precise composition of such bodies, determined by x-ray diffraction, revealed that their major inorganic constituent is indeed calcium, with significant amounts of phosphorus, silicon, and zinc as well. Emission of calcareous bodies through the tegument was observed by scanning electron microscopy, explaining their accumulation in the intracapsular spaces around worms embedded in liver tissue of the host. Following their emission, the crystalline substance of corpuscles dissolves, leaving only nonrefractile, membrane-bound cytoplasmic debris. These observations do not preclude the possibility that calcareous bodies may play some role as buffers or reservoirs of inorganic ions. However, it is difficult to accept such a function for unencapsulated worms in the coelom or intestinal lumen; we suggest that excretion is a more likely role in such sites.
Asexually proliferative Mesocestoides corti tetrathyridia were studied to test the hypothesis of in utero transmission in mice and define more clearly the path of transmammary transmission. In utero transmission was not observed in 132 fetuses (22 litters) taken by caesarean section from infected mothers. However, 19 of these mothers had tetrathyridia in their mammary glands at the time of operation, nine had worms in the uterine lumen, and one had a single worm in the maternal blood space of a placenta. No tetrathyridia were found in amniotic cavities. No infection was found in 32 young (7 litters) examined immediately after birth to infected mothers, but before nursing. No infection was found in 30 young (5 litters) removed from infected mothers before nursing and raised by uninfected fosters. Of 29 uninfected young (5 litters) allowed to nurse on infected mothers, 18 became infected. Whole mounts and sections of infected mammary glands showed proliferating tetrathyridia free in larger milk ducts and free and encapsulated in mammary parenchyma. These data suggest that maternal transmission of M. corti tetrathyridia in mice occurs primarily or perhaps exclusively by the transmammary route.
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