Myxozoans are common parasites of fish kidneys, with most having specific sites of development. Five specific sites of development include (1) the lumen of renal tubules, (2) the renal corpuscles followed by location in renal tubules, (3) intracellular location within the tubular epithelium followed by a stage in the lumen of the ducts, (4) haematopoietic tissue with dispersed trophozoites, and (5) haematopoietic tissue with large, localized plasmodia. A coelozoic development preceded by presporogonic multiplication characterises most Sphaerospora spp. Early plasmodial stages of Myxidium and Chloromyxum spp. are frequently found in the renal glomerules, while spores develop in the urinary channels in plasmodia released from the renal corpuscles. In Hoferellus and Myxobilatus spp., spores are formed in small plasmodia inside the lumen of the urinary ducts after several internal cleavages in the epithelium of renal tubules. The presence of dispersed trophozoites among haematopoietic tissue cells of the renal interstitium characterises the development of Sphaerospora tincae and Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae, the causative agent of proliferative kidney disease (PKD). Spores of S. tincae are formed at the place of plasmodial development, while spore formation of PKD is in the renal tubules. A large mass of spores, often surrounded by a connective tissue capsule, can appear in the renal interstitium during infections by several Myxobolus spp.; furthermore, a large number of these spores formed in plasmodia in distant tissues can also accumulate in melano-macrophage centres.KEY WORDS: Myxozoa · Plasmodia · Site preference · Fish · Kidney
Resale or republication not permitted without written consent of the publisherDis Aquat Org 78: [45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53] 2007 tench. This isolated intercellular location among the haemopoetic cells was confirmed with electron microscopy by Lom et al. (1985a). A specific combination of intercellular and coelozoic developments characterise Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae (Canning, Curry, Feist, Longshaw & Okamura, 1999), the causative agent of proliferative kidney disease. Extrasporogonic stages of this myxozoan develop intercellularly among the cells of the renal interstitium; the spores, however, are formed in the renal tubules (Kent et al. 2000, Feist et al. 2001. Little is known about how myxozoans form large plasmodia in the kidney. Although it has been known for some time (Dyková et al. 1987) that plasmodia of Myxidium rhodei Léger, 1905 can form large plasmodia inside the renal corpuscles of cyprinids, little is known about the validity of the great number of Myxobolus spp. listed from the kidney by Shulman (1966). Dispersed spores and large groups of Myxobolus spores are commonly found in the renal parenchyma, but without observation of the developing stages it is difficult to determine whether the spores developed at the site or were carried and accumulated there by the host macrophages. Molnár & Kovács-Gayer (1985) observed that, following a heavy infect...