Sparganosis is a relatively neglected food- and waterborne disease caused by species of the tapeworm genus Spirometra the global distribution of which has not been sufficiently recognised. Known mainly as a zoonosis of East Asia, its species are native to all inhabited continents including Europe. Spirometra has been reported from numerous wildlife species from 17 European countries and a critical review confirmed 17 autochthonous and 8 imported human clinical cases. We present the first molecular evidence of the coincident presence of two species in Europe and review the current distribution to raise awareness of the parasite in this region. Spirometra erinaceieuropaei is restricted to Europe and S. mansoni represents a lineage distributed mainly across Asia and Oceania that reaches Europe. The parasite is common in Eastern Europe and its distribution has potential to expand along with its invasive or migrating mammal hosts, spreading the risks of human infection.
The present work involves an ultrastructural study of the mature spermatozoon of the anoplocephalid cestode Gallegoides arfaai (Mobedi and Ghadirian, 1977) Tenora and Mas-Coma, 1978, obtained from the small intestine of naturally infected wood mice, Apodemus sylvaticus Linnaeus, 1758 (Rodentia, Muridae). The mature spermatozoon of G. arfaai is a filiform cell, tapered at both ends and lacking mitochondria. It is characterized by the presence of a 1,000-nm-long apical cone and two 140-nm-thick crest-like bodies in its anterior extremity. The axoneme, of the 9 + '1' trepaxonematan pattern, lacks a periaxonemal sheath, and disorganization occurs at the level of the nuclear region of the sperm cell. The cortical microtubules form two to four fields according to the different regions of the male gamete. They are twisted at an angle of about 35 degrees , becoming parallel towards the posterior extremity of spermatozoon. The nucleus, spiralled around the axoneme, shows an irregular shape in both longitudinal and cross-sections. Numerous electron-dense granules were observed, which transform into an electron-dense material in the posterior extremity of the cell. Moreover, we describe for the first time the total length of the anterior region of sperm containing the helical crest-like bodies. This anterior extremity measures around 15 mum and presents two helical crest-like bodies of different lengths that describe 13-14 turns around the sperm body. Our ultrastructural results on the G. arfaai spermatozoon are compared with the ultrastructural organization of the spermatozoa of other previously studied species, with particular emphasis on the anoplocephalids.
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