1 / 29

Nematodes David Bird 515-6813 david_bird@ncsu.edu

Nematodes David Bird 515-6813 david_bird@ncsu.edu. Lecture 1: Nematodes as plant parasites Lecture 2: Model systems and the phylum Nematoda Lecture 3: Nematode anatomy. C. elegans as reference. http://www.wormatlas.org/handbook/contents.htm

rigg
Download Presentation

Nematodes David Bird 515-6813 david_bird@ncsu.edu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. NematodesDavid Bird515-6813david_bird@ncsu.edu • Lecture 1: Nematodes as plant parasites • Lecture 2: Model systems and the phylum Nematoda • Lecture 3: Nematode anatomy Nematology

  2. C. elegans as reference http://www.wormatlas.org/handbook/contents.htm Compare details to plant-parasites in later lectures Nematology

  3. C. elegans as reference • Complete cellular architecture of C. elegans known • Lineage and parts list • 558 cells at hatch (959 in adult hermaphrodite) Nematology

  4. C. elegans as reference • Complete cellular architecture of C. elegans known • parts list • Tissues • epidermis/cuticle • growth and molting • musculature • nervous system (lecture 5) • Organs • pharynx • gut • excretory/secretory system • sex organs (lecture 4) • gonads • copulatory structures Nematology

  5. Hypodermis torroidal valves Nematology

  6. Cuticle Nematology

  7. Molting Meloidogyne Nematology

  8. Musculature • Two distinct muscle systems • Somatic muscle • Nematode mobility • Specialized muscles • Independent function • somatic muscle in “sedentary” plant-parasites becomes inactive; other muscles not affected • chemical nematicides (e.g., acetylcholinesterase inhibitors such as Aldicarb) may target one system (somatic) but not the other Nematology

  9. Musculature • Somatic muscle • longitudinal rows of striated (multiple sarcomere) muscle between the epidermal nerve cords in apposing quadrants • composed of 95 cells in adult C. elegans; >50,000 in Ascaris adults (from 83 in the L2) • attached to cuticle via hemidesmosomes • composed of 3 parts: • cell body • nucleus, organelles • arm • reaches to the nerve cord • spindle • contractile proteins Nematology

  10. Musculature • Non-striated, specialized muscles. In C. elegans: • feeding: 20 pharyngeal muscle cells • gut contraction: 2 intestinal muscle cells • defecation control: 1 anal sphincter; 1 anal depressor • sex-specific • 41 male-specific muscles for copulation • 8 vulval and 8 uterine muscles C. elegans vulva Nematology

  11. Nervous system • Lecture 5 • 302 neurons at C. elegans hatch • overall organization: • dorsal/ventral nerve cords • circumpharyngeal nerve ring • many sensory neurons in head • 118 distinct functional classes: • sensory neuons • chemo receptors (amphids) • mechanoreceptors • thermo receptors • etc • interneurons • motor neurons • sex-specific neurons Nematology

  12. C. elegans as reference • Complete cellular architecture of C. elegans known • parts list • Tissues • epidermis/cuticle • growth and molting • musculature • nervous tissue • Organs • pharynx • gut • excretory/secretory system • sex organs (lecture 4) • gonads • copulatory structures Nematology

  13. Pharynx/buccal cavity • highly specialized for different life-styles • odontostyle of plant parasites • distinct developmental origin from gut • lined with cuticle • specialized feeding apparatus lost at molt Rhabdodemania minima (marine sp.) R. reniformis Nematology

  14. C. elegans pharynx • a single, unified, epithelial organ with its own: • nervous system • muscle cells • gland cells • most features are organized radially. Nematology

  15. Pharyngeal glands • Typically 3 (e.g. tylenchids) or 5 (e.g. C. elegans) • roles in digestion and host-parasite interactions • major source of protein secretions by parasites Nematology

  16. Gut • 20 cells in C. elegans • Multiple functions: • secrete digestive enzymes • absorb nutrients (microvilli) • storage organ (lipoprotein granules) • synthesis of egg yolk proteins Nematology

  17. Excretory/secretory system V adenophoreans L L • Adenophorean • simple, glandular • Secerentean • complex, glandular + “H”-shaped tubular Nematology

  18. Excretory/secretory system • Secerentean tubes • many anatomical modifications • (e.g. tylenchids lack one side canal) • developmental regulation • C. elegans dauer • Meloidogyne pre-post penetration • Function • tubular part: • osmoregulation • C. elegans • excretion? • glandular part • secretion of the glycocalyx • Meloidogyne, Anguina,Toxocara • protease secretion (exocorporeal digestion?) • Nippostrongylus • Secretion of the egg matrix • (Tylenchulus only) • molting/exsheathment hormnes? • other specialized roles • tube-building? Nematology

  19. Reproductive strategies • Most species are: • dioecious (two sexes) • gonochoristic (morphologically distinct males and females) • amphimictic (eggs and sperm form different individual parents) Nematology

  20. Reproductive strategies • Most species are dioecious, gonochoristic and amphimictic, but: • C. elegans is a protandrous (sequential) hermaphrodite + true males • Strongyloides exhibits alternating free-living amphimixis and parasitic apomixis (parthenogenisis) C. elegans hermaphrodite Nematology

  21. Reproductive strategies • Most species are dioecious, gonochoristic and amphimictic, but: • C. elegans is a protandrous (sequential) hermaphrodite + true males • Strongyloides exhibits alternating free-living amphimixis and parasitic apomixis (parthenogenisis) • Variation within a dioecious, gonochoristic genus: • Meloidogyne carolinensis: obligate amphimictic • M. hapla: facultative meiotic parthenogenisis • M. incognita: obligate mitotic parthenogenisis • role of males in such species? Nematology

  22. C. elegans hermaphrodite • Didelphic gonad Nematology

  23. Germ cell development:C. elegans ovary Nematology

  24. Germ cell development:M. hapla ovary (V. Thomas and V. Williamson, UCD) Nematology

  25. M. hapla meiosis The 16 bivalent chromosomes of an M. hapla oocyte. Each bivalent consists of 4 chromatids (2 per univalent) in close association , forming a tetrad. Tetrads indicate that meiosis is taking place. Nematology

  26. 2n 2n M. hapla meiosis meiosis I Polar body 1 2n 2n meiosis II Polar body 2 n n Polar body 2 and egg nucleus fuse Sperm and egg nucleus fuse n 2n n n n 2n 2n Parthenogenesis Fertilization Nematology

  27. C. elegans male • monodelphic testis • copulatory apparatus at tail Nematology

  28. ATLAS OF C. elegans ANATOMYan illustrated handbook http://www.wormatlas.org/handbook/contents.htm Nematology

  29. NematodesDavid Bird515-6813david_bird@ncsu.edu • Lecture 1: Nematodes as plant parasites • Lecture 2: Model systems and the phylum Nematoda • Lecture 3: Nematode anatomy • Lecture 4: Reproduction and development Nematology

More Related