The ultrastructure of the mature spermatozoon of Gyliauchen sp., a parasite of the dusky rabbitfish Siganus fuscescens, was studied by transmission electron microscopy. The spermatozoon possesses two axonemes of the 9+"1" pattern of Trepaxonemata, four attachment zones, one mitochondrion, a nucleus, cortical microtubules, external ornamentation of the plasma membrane, and spine-like bodies. The main characteristics of this spermatozoon are the presence of one mitochondrion, spine-like bodies not associated with the external ornamentation, and a posterior extremity of type 3 that is characterized by the following sequence: posterior extremity of the nucleus then posterior extremity of the second axoneme. Numerous other ultrastructural features are also discussed and compared to the digenean spermatology literature. This is the first study of a member of the Gyliauchenidae and the fourth within the Lepocreadioidea. The results show that many ultrastructural characters are variable within this superfamily and could be useful for phylogeny.
The mature Holorchis micracanthum spermatozoon exhibits an apical cone of electron-dense material forming a lateral extension, extramembranar ornamentations, and two fields of cortical microtubules, delimited by attachment zones. The axonemes, of the 9 + "1" pattern of the Platyhelminthes, are shifted longitudinally, one compared to the other. The nucleus, with a fibrous chromatin and a more or less circular section, granules of electron-dense material, and a moniliform mitochondrion are present. The latter, in longitudinal sections, appears in the form of successive bulges, connected to each other by a fine mitochondrial cord, and extends along almost the whole length of the gamete. To our knowledge, a moniliform mitochondrion has never been described before in a digenean. Likewise, the presence of a lateral extension of an apical cone of electron-dense material has never been previously reported in the Lepocreadioidea. In addition, in this work, we show for the first time the existence of extramembranar ornamentations in a species of the Lepocreadiidae.
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