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Ultrastructural changes in posterior midgut cells associated with blood feeding in adult female <i>Rhodnius prolixus</i> Stal (Hemiptera: Reduviidae)
81
Citations
13
References
1983
Year
Posterior MidgutEntomologyCytoskeletonAnatomyDigestive TractCellular PhysiologyDigestion PeriodPublic HealthAnimal PhysiologyFood DigestionHistopathologyPosterior Midgut CellsMorphogenesisBlood FeedingUltrastructural ChangesBiologyDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyHyperparasiteCellular StructureMedicine
Modifications of posterior midgut cells of Rhodnius prolixus following a meal of rabbit blood are described. Prominent stacks and whorls of rough endoplasmic reticulum become redistributed following a blood meal but later reform during the postfeeding period. Lysosomes undergo internal structural changes and apparent fluctuations in their number per cell as a result of blood meal ingestion. Before blood feeding, the apical surface of the midgut cells show a typical arrangement of a plasma membrane covered on the lumenal surface by a glycocalyx. After a blood meal, a more complex organisation appears, consisting of two plasma membranes separated by an electron-dense matrix. The lumenal apical membrane proliferates during the digestion period to form loosely organised extracellular membrane layers which may function as a peritrophic membrane. Changes in the rough endoplasmic reticulum and lysosomes and modifications to the apical cell surface appear to coincide with previously described proteinase activity cycles in the posterior midgut of R. prolixus. The implications of these results are discussed and are compared with similar ultrastructural events from haematophagous Diptera.
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