2008
DOI: 10.14411/fp.2008.014
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Differences in viability and reactivity of actinospores of three myxozoan species upon ageing

Abstract: Abstract.Little is known about the viability of myxozoan actinospore stages after harvest from laboratory cultures of infected oligochaete worms. The viability and reactivity of actinospores of three myxozoan species was evaluated after short-term storage at 4°C and 12°C. Two methods of determining actinospore viability were compared: differential fluorescent staining and direct microscopic observation of morphological indicators of spore integrity. Spore reactivity was quantified by measuring polar filament d… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…As shown by qPCR detection, the staining procedure did not affect the ability of spores to attach onto the fish host surface. Although FDA may cause spontaneous discharge of polar capsules (Kallert & El-Matbouli 2008), it was not possible to measure whether a greater number of unstained actinospores would attempt penetration after anchorage to the host. Differences in absolute numbers of parasites found on rainbow trout gills in the different analyses (despite using the same spore concentrations) highlight the importance of using the same parasite aliquots for comparison of all samples.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As shown by qPCR detection, the staining procedure did not affect the ability of spores to attach onto the fish host surface. Although FDA may cause spontaneous discharge of polar capsules (Kallert & El-Matbouli 2008), it was not possible to measure whether a greater number of unstained actinospores would attempt penetration after anchorage to the host. Differences in absolute numbers of parasites found on rainbow trout gills in the different analyses (despite using the same spore concentrations) highlight the importance of using the same parasite aliquots for comparison of all samples.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several other species of actinospores showed polar filament discharge or sporoplasm emission when they were offered mucus samples of non-susceptible hosts (Yokoyama et al 1993, 1995, McGeorge et al 1997, Özer & Wootten 2002, Yokoyama & Urawa 1997, Kallert & El-Matbouli 2008. However, reports on pronounced host specificity during reactions to host stimuli among actinospores are scarce.…”
Section: Resale or Republication Not Permitted Without Written Consenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TAMs were harvested by filtering the water from the culture containers through 20 μm mesh. TAMs used for the infection trials were less than 48 h old [47,48]. Fish were exposed individually to 3000 freshly filtered TAMs/fish in 500 ml dechlorinated tap water at 15°C for 3 h. Fifty-three individuals per group were exposed.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, actinospores may be more negatively affected by temperature than myxospores, which are comparatively stable due to the hardened valves that surround the sporoplasm (Hedrick et al 2008). For example, M. cerebralis actinospores remain viable for *15 days at 15°C and only 1 day at 23°C, whereas myxospores remain viable for >60 days at <10°C and 7 days at 22°C (El-Matbouli et al 1999;Hedrick et al 2008;Kallert and El-Matbouli 2008). Similar relationships were observed for C. shasta: actinospores were viable for *7 days at 4°C and for *4 days at 20°C and myxospores persisted for >150 days at 4°C and for 50 days at 20°C (Foott et al 2007;Bjork 2010;Chiaramonte 2013).…”
Section: Water Temperature Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%