The effects of the degree of urbanization on the composition and mean abundance of helminth species and the structure of helminth communities in the Mongolian racerunner were investigated along a rural-urban gradient in the region of Ulan-Ude city (the Republic of Buryatia, Russia) and neighbouring rural districts. Racerunners were obtained from key areas and categorized into three grades based on the degree of urbanization. In this study, a total of 208 lizards were examined. The helminth communities in the Mongolian racerunner were studied at the infracommunity and component community levels. The nematode Spauligodon pseudoeremiasi was a sensitive bioindicator of the degree of urbanization in our study. All parameters of helminth infracommunities in the Mongolian racerunner were significantly reduced with increasing degree of urbanization of the key areas. Two parameters of helminth component communities (the proportion of hosts infected with parasites and the Shannon index) were significantly reduced with increasing degree of urbanization. The decline recorded in parameters of helminth infracommunities and component communities in the Mongolian racerunner were probably connected with the attenuation of the relationships between helminths, having a complex life cycle with intermediate hosts along the rural-urban gradient.
The structural response and plasticity of the cestode tegument in response to the influence of the host organism is not yet well understood. The main aims of our in vitro study were to analyse the ultrastructural mechanisms and kinetics of tegumental secretion in two cestode species, Dibothriocephalus dendriticus and Ligula interrupta, in response to the influence of fish host blood serum. The incubation of plerocercoids in the culture medium, which contained fish host blood serum, resulted in an increased number of secretory products on the tegumental surface. Our study is the first to experimentally demonstrate the formation of plerocercoid protective layers influenced by the host's internal environment factors. The mechanism of the generation of the protective layer included the following: the intensive formation of organelles in the tegumental cytons and their transfer to the distal cytoplasm of the tegument; increases in extracellular vesicles and vacuoles released on the tegumental surface; arrangement of secretory products and fine‐dispersed extracellular matrix in layers; and formation of the protective layer. The structural tegumental response included increases in the glycocalyx layer and structural changes. Our study revealed that the universal mechanism of protective layer formation was intrinsic to different tapeworms. We hypothesize that plerocercoids of cestodes parasitizing fish may use tegumental secretion in the formation of a protective layer and in the release of immunoregulator molecules to evade the host's immune response.
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