Some ultrastructural aspects of Crithidia guilhermei n.sp. isolated from Phaenicia cuprina (Diptera: Calliphoridae)

Abstract
A flagellate trypanosomatid was isolated from the fly Phaenicia cuprina captured in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It grows well in liver infusion - trypticase medium, in the form of choanomastigotes, typical of the genus Crithidia. Morphometrical data obtained at the light microscopical level indicated that the new isolated Crithidia is smaller than Crithidia luciliae, a parasite isolated from Phaenicia sericata. Transmission electron microscopy of thin sections revealed that this trypanosomatid has a flagellar pocket divided into two compartments, one basal and the other apical, separated by a region of attachment of the flagellum to the cell body. The attachment region was characterized in freeze-fracture replicas. The flagellate has a compact kinetoplast DNA network. As in endosymbiote-containing trypanosomatids previously described, no subpellicular microtubules were seen in the regions where the mitochondria touched the plasma membrane, although no endosymbiotes were found in this flagellate. Electrophoretic mobility of six enzymes showed that the parasite could not be grouped in any of the isoenzymic pattern groups of other Crithidia spp. These observations indicate that the trypanosomatid isolated from P. cuprina is a new species of Crithidia. The flagellate is described as Crithidia guilhermei n. sp.