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Certain parasites can manipulate their hosts to enhance their own fitness and transmission success. Rhizocephalan barnacles are a notable example, inducing significant changes in their crustacean host's morphology, physiology, and behaviour. Until recently, it was believed that the spider crab Scyra aff. ferox is parasitized by a single species Sacculina pilosella in the Sea of Japan. However, previous molecular studies have revealed a complex of unrelated species, Sacculina pugettiae (fam. Sacculinidae) and Parasacculina pilosella (fam. Polyascidae). These rhizocephalans can even parasitize one host specimen simultaneously. Here, we investigated the interaction of S. pugettiae and P. pilosella with the nervous system of their common host. Species were identified based on receptacle morphology, with further validation through 18S gene phylogenetic analysis. The parasites interacted differently with the host nervous system: S. pugettiae had goblet‐shaped organs in the ganglion periphery, while P. pilosella lacked these structures, instead possessing numerous neuropil rootlets. In case of simultaneous infection, both goblet‐shaped organs and neuropil rootlets were present. Histochemistry revealed the presence of muscular rosettes in the rootlets of both species, suggesting a similar organization of the muscular system despite phylogenetic differences. Scanning electron microscopy confirmed the presence of host cell projections enveloping the rootlets. This study provides insights into the morphological features of rhizocephalan‐decapod interaction and highlights differences in their interaction with host nervous tissue between families. Our results also confirmed the loss of the goblet‐shaped organs in Polyascidae.
Certain parasites can manipulate their hosts to enhance their own fitness and transmission success. Rhizocephalan barnacles are a notable example, inducing significant changes in their crustacean host's morphology, physiology, and behaviour. Until recently, it was believed that the spider crab Scyra aff. ferox is parasitized by a single species Sacculina pilosella in the Sea of Japan. However, previous molecular studies have revealed a complex of unrelated species, Sacculina pugettiae (fam. Sacculinidae) and Parasacculina pilosella (fam. Polyascidae). These rhizocephalans can even parasitize one host specimen simultaneously. Here, we investigated the interaction of S. pugettiae and P. pilosella with the nervous system of their common host. Species were identified based on receptacle morphology, with further validation through 18S gene phylogenetic analysis. The parasites interacted differently with the host nervous system: S. pugettiae had goblet‐shaped organs in the ganglion periphery, while P. pilosella lacked these structures, instead possessing numerous neuropil rootlets. In case of simultaneous infection, both goblet‐shaped organs and neuropil rootlets were present. Histochemistry revealed the presence of muscular rosettes in the rootlets of both species, suggesting a similar organization of the muscular system despite phylogenetic differences. Scanning electron microscopy confirmed the presence of host cell projections enveloping the rootlets. This study provides insights into the morphological features of rhizocephalan‐decapod interaction and highlights differences in their interaction with host nervous tissue between families. Our results also confirmed the loss of the goblet‐shaped organs in Polyascidae.
Mycetomorpha vancouverensis is an enigmatic parasitic barnacle from the family Mycetomorphidae, known for its unclear phylogenetic position within Rhizocephala. Specimens of M. vancouverensis were collected from infected Neocrangon communis shrimps near the South Kuril Islands. Detailed morphological studies were conducted using histological techniques and scanning electron microscopy, and 18S rDNA sequences were used to resolve the phylogenetic position of M. vancouverensis within Rhizocephala. Morphological analysis revealed a complex externa structure with spermatogenic bodies and the presence of a main trunk in the interna. Some of the side branches of the interna invade the host’s nerve tissue and are modified into specialized goblet-shaped organs. These invasive rootlets are morphologically similar to the goblet-shaped organs in the family Peltogastridae. Molecular analysis confirmed that the Mycetomorphidae is a sister group to the Peltogastridae. At the same time, peltogastrids were recovered as polyphyletic. Our findings contribute to the understanding of the evolution of parasitic barnacles and highlight the unique adaptations of Mycetomorphidae within the broader context of Rhizocephala.
Background Rhizocephalan interaction with their decapod hosts is a superb example of host manipulation. These parasites are able to alter the host’s physiology and behavior. Host-parasite interaction is performed, presumably, via special modified rootlets invading the ventral ganglions. Methods In this study, we focus on the morphology and ultrastructure of these special rootlets in Polyascus polygeneus (Lützen & Takahashi, 1997), family Polyascidae, invading the neuropil of the host’s nervous tissue. The ventral ganglionic mass of the infected crabs were fixed, and the observed sites of the host-parasite interplay were studied using transmission electron microscopy, immunolabeling and confocal microscopy. Results The goblet-shaped organs present in the basal families of parasitic barnacles were presumably lost in a common ancestor of Polyascidae and crown “Akentrogonida”, but the observed invasive rootlets appear to perform similar functions, including the synthesis of various substances which are transferred to the host’s nervous tissue. Invasive rootlets significantly differ from trophic ones in cell layer composition and cuticle thickness. Numerous multilamellar bodies are present in the rootlets indicating the intrinsic cell rearrangement. The invasive rootlets of P. polygeneus are enlaced by the thin projections of glial cells. Thus, glial cells can be both the first hosts’ respondents to the nervous tissue damage and the mediator of the rhizocephalan interaction with the nervous cells. One of the potential molecules engaged in the relationships of P. polygeneus and its host is serotonin, a neurotransmitter which is found exclusively in the invasive rootlets but not in trophic ones. Serotonin participates in different biological pathways in metazoans including the regulation of aggression in crustaceans, which is reduced in infected crabs. We conclude that rootlets associated with the host’s nervous tissue are crucial for the regulation of host-parasite interplay and for evolution of the Rhizocephala.
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