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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Phagotrophy and two new structures in the malaria parasite Plasmodium berghei.

TLDR
Continuity between these bodies and the host cytoplasm was found in a number of electron micrographs, showing that the bodies are formed by invagination of the double plasma membrane of the parasite.
Abstract
Blood collected from rats infected with Plasmodium berghei was centrifuged and the pellet was fixed for 1 hour in 1 per cent buffered OsO 4 with 4.9 per cent sucrose. The material was embedded in n -butyl methacrylate and the resulting blocks sectioned for electron microscopy. The parasites were found to contain, in almost all sections, oval bodies of the same density and structure as the host cytoplasm. Continuity between these bodies and the host cytoplasm was found in a number of electron micrographs, showing that the bodies are formed by invagination of the double plasma membrane of the parasite. In this way the host cell is incorporated by phagotrophy into food vacuoles within the parasite. Hematin, the residue of hemoglobin digestion, was never observed inside the food vacuole but in small vesicles lying around it and sometimes connected with it. The vesicles are pinched off from the food vacuole proper and are the site of hemoglobin digestion. The active double limiting membrane is responsible not only for the formation of food vacuoles but also for the presence of two new structures. One is composed of two to six concentric double wavy membranes originating from the plasma membrane. Since no typical mitochondria were found in P. berghei , it is assumed that the concentric structure performs mitochondrial functions. The other structure appears as a sausage-shaped vacuole surrounded by two membranes of the same thickness, density, and spacing as the limiting membrane of the body. The cytoplasm of the parasite is rich in vesicles of endoplasmic reticulum and Palade9s small particles. Its nucleus is of low density and encased in a double membrane. The host cells (reticulocytes) have mitochondria with numerous cristae mitochondriales. In many infected and intact reticulocytes ferritin was found in vacuoles, mitochondria, canaliculi, or scattered in the cytoplasm.

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Book ChapterDOI

Lysosomes and Related Particles

TL;DR: This chapter discusses lysosomes and related particles, which are particles in which intravenously injected peroxidase is concentrated and which when isolated shortly after the injection of the protein behave very much like lyssomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Iron metabolism in the bone marrow as seen by electron microscopy: a critical review.

Marcel Bessis, +1 more
- 01 Jun 1962 - 
TL;DR: Electron microscopy has established the erythroblastic island as a morphologic and functional unit of the bone marrow as well as suggesting that normally some iron reutilization within the marrow proceeds by way of erythrophagocytosis, fragmentation, intracellular hemolysis of red cells, formation of ferritin and ropheocyTosis.
Book ChapterDOI

The Ground Substance; Observations from Electron Microscopy

TL;DR: The submicroscopic ground substance examined at electron microscope resolutions presents a picture of a highly complex, polyphasic mixture that is rich in ribonucleic acid.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A study of fixation for electron microscopy

TL;DR: Fixation experiments with buffered OsO4 solutions have shown that the appearance of the fixed cells is conditioned by the pH of the fixative, and the quality of fixation can be materially improved by buffering the OsO 4 solutions at pH 7.3-7.5 with acetate-veronal buffer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Varying the Vehicle for OsO4 in Tissue Fixation

TL;DR: Differences in the quality of OsO4 fixation of tissue cells obtained with any one of the several recommended mixtures may be referable to structural or compositional variations associated with functional changes, but in most instances the differences seem more properly considered as products of fixation.
Journal ArticleDOI

A small particulate component of the cytoplasm

TL;DR: In the Discussion an attempt is made to integrate the observations presented in this paper with the already available cytological, histochemical, and cytochemical information.
Journal ArticleDOI

The fine structure of neurons.

TL;DR: Th Thin sections of representative neurons from intramural, sympathetic and dorsal root ganglia, medulla oblongata, and cerebellar cortex were studied with the aid of the electron microscope and intermediate forms between the two membranous systems have been found.
Journal ArticleDOI

Liver microsomes; an integrated morphological and biochemical study.

TL;DR: Rat liver, liver homogenates, and microsome fractions separated therefrom were examined systematically in the electron microscope in sections of OsO 4 -fixed, methacrylate-embedded tissue and pellets and it was found that most microsomes are morphologically identical with the rough surfaced elements of the endoplasmic reticula of hepatic cells.
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