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STRUCTURAL AND FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF CYST CELLS IN 
SARCOCYSTIS SP. (SPOROZOA, APICOMPLEXA)
A. I. Radchenko, T. V. Beyer  Institute of Cytology RAS, St. Petersburg, Russia;  
 By means of light and electron microscopy, the structural pattern of muscle cysts (sarcocysts) was examined for the four 
species of the genus Sarcocystis: S. muris (from murine skeletal muscles), Sarcocystis sp. and S. fusiformis (from, 
respectively, heart and skeletal muscles of buffalo), and S. ovifelis (from ovine long muscles). The orderly fashion of the interior of the 
cyst is attained by partitition of its space into numerous compartments with the involvement of the intermediate filaments. These, in their 
turn, are bound to each other by thin filaments to make eventually a common filamentous net. The net limits separate groups of cells 
referred to as cyst zoites. The common net of filaments and micro tubules (when present) may be regarded not only as the organizer of 
the cyst interior cytoskeleton, but also as the main mechanism of substance transportation in various directions: from the host cell to the 
sarcocyst, and within or outside the cyst. The role of dedifferentiation, proliferation and differentiation processes is suggested in the 
establishment of the fixed sequence of events throughout the unidirectional development of cyst cells and their interaction, from precystic 
meronts to cyst merozoites (gamonts). Special attention is paid to metrocyte morphogenesis and functioning. In the present work, 
metrocytes subjected to apoptosis were recognized. It is suggested that phenomenon of programmed cell death in metrocytes may be 
associated with the control of cell number in mature and ageing sarcocysts.
 
 
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