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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 1188

Robert K. Peck and Klaus Hausmann; Primary lysosomes of the ciliate Pseudomicrothorax dubius: Cytochemical identification and role in phagocytosis. J.Protozool. 27(4):401-409, 1980

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Filamentous cyanobacteria are ingested through the cytopharynx of the ciliate Psudomicrothorax dubius. The cytopharynx is a complex of microtubules and microfilaments located in a highly vesiculated cytoplasm, the phagoplasm. Two types of membrane-bounded phagoplasmic vesicles can be distinguished by their differences in size, fine structure, and acid phosphatase (AcPase) content. One type has a homogeneous, electron-dense interior which is AcPase-positive. These vesicles are present in fed cells and in unfed cells devoid of food vacuoles, and thus appear to be primary lysosomes. During phagocytosis, exocytosis within the cytopharynx of the primary lysosomes results in the elaboration of a food vacuole. The vacuole grows by incorporation of lysosomal membrane; lysosomal hydrolases are liberated into the vacuole. Within less than 1 second of AcPase's entry into the food vacuole, it is detectable within the cyanobacterial cytoplasm, and within 5 seconds, destruction of the cyanobacterial filament is observed. It is hypothesized that the rapidity of hydrolase penetration of the cyanobacterial cell wall is the result of the action of molecules analogous to the " killing agents" of neutrophil leukocytes, which rapidly render bacterial envelopes permeable. AcPase, and presumably other hydrolases, are present in the cyanobacterial filament when filament destruction occurs; they thus appear implicated in this process. Hydrolases may activate an autodestruction mechanism in the cyanobacterium. Firm adherence of the food vacuole membrane to the cyanobacterial filament is demonstrated, and its role in phagocytosis is discussed.