Caulleryella
Caulleryella | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
(unranked): | Sar |
Superphylum: | Alveolata |
Phylum: | Apicomplexa Levine 1970 |
Class: | Conoidasida Levine 1988 |
Subclass: | Gregarinasina Dufour 1828 |
Order: | Neogregarinorida Grassé & Schrével 1953 |
Suborder: | Schizogregarinina |
Family: | Caulleryellidae Keilin 1914 |
Genus: | Caulleryella Keilin 1914 |
Species | |
Caulleryella annulatae |
Caulleryella is a genus of parasitic protozoa of the phylum Apicomplexa. Species in this genus infect insects (Diptera).
Taxonomy
This genus was created by Keilin in 1914.[1] The genus was named after Professor Maurice Caullery at the Laboratoire d’Evolution des Etres Organises in Paris.
There are five species currently recognised in this genus.
The type species is Caulleryella aphiochaetae.
Description
The species in this genus are spread by the orofaecal route. They infect the epithelium of the gut.
The sporozoites are elongate and attach to intestinal epithelium.
The trophozoites are flask shaped and have the neck embedded in the host cell.
During merogony the cell becomes spheroidal with peripheral nuclei.
Cytokinesis occurs to yield a bouquet of merozoites attached at one end to a residuum.
The gamonts are spheroidal. They pair and fuse
A common wall forms around the juxtaposed gamonts forming a gametocyst within which the two gamonts are termed gametocytes.
Each pair of gamocytes give rise to 16 isogametes. These in their turn pair and fuse to form 8 zygotes.
The zygotes also undergo cytokinesis by a progression of cleavage furrows from one end.
This leads to the formation of 8 sporozoites attached to a single polar residuum.
These may infect other cells within the gut or form a cyst which is released from the gut.
References
- ↑ Keilin, D., 1914: Une nouvelle Schizogregarine, Caulleryella aphiochoetae n. g. n. sp., parasite intestinal d'une larve d'un Diptere cyclorhaphe (Aphiochoeta rufipes Meig.). Compte Rendu de la Societe de Biologie Paris 76: 768-771
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