Plasmodium diminutivum

Plasmodium diminutivum is a parasite of the genus Plasmodium subgenus Carinamoeba.

Plasmodium achiotense
Scientific classification
Domain:
(unranked):
(unranked):
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
P. diminutivum
Binomial name
Plasmodium diminutivum

Like all Plasmodium species P. diminutivum has both vertebrate and insect hosts. The vertebrate hosts for this parasite are reptiles.

Description

This species was described by Telford in 1973.[1]

The parasites have no apparent effect on the host erythrocyte and tend to lie in a polar or lateral position within the host cell. This species appears to infect only mature cells.

The schizonts are initially round to oval but as they mature become fan shaped with a pigment mass forming the handle of the fan. Mature schizonts measure 4.1 +/- 0.2 (range: 3-4) micrometres x 3.1 +/- 0.1 (range: (3-4) micrometres and contain 4-6 merozoites.

Mature gametocytes are round to oval and measure 5.6 +/- 0.2 (range: 5-7) micrometres x 4.8 +/- 0.2 (range: 4-6) micrometres. Vacuoles are rarely seen.

Geographical occurrence

This species occurs in Panama.

Clinical features and host pathology

The only known host is the lizard Ameiva ameiva.

gollark: Yes.
gollark: In JS you used to have to explicitly handle callbacks for all that stuff, and then used to have to have a lot of `.then` calls on promises, but now we have `async`/`await` so it looks basically like regular code.
gollark: One sort of nice but also sort of problematic thing about Go is that it uses green threads so operations like writing files look synchronous and you can write code accordingly, but are done asynchronously.
gollark: Strictly speaking it has generics, but hardcoded ones on arrays/channels/maps.
gollark: So you need `if err != nil { return err }` everywhere because it has no exceptions or stuff like `Option`.

References

  1. S. R. Telford, Jr. ( 1973) Malaria parasites of the “Borriguerro” lizard, Ameiva ameiva (Sauria: Teiidae) in Panama. J. Protozol. 20(2) 203-207


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.