Electron microscopy of stages of Isospora felis of the cat in the mesenteric lymph node of the mouse

Abstract
Stages of Isospora felis of the cat in the mesenteric lymph node of the mouse 25 days after oral inoculation with oocysts, have been described at the ultrastructural level. The organisms occurred singly within parasitophorous vacuoles in host cell cytoplasm and were sporozoite-like, having a large crystalloid body up to 5.5 μm in length posterior to the nucleus. The size and appearance of the parasitophorous vacuole varied. Some vacuoles contained numerous, small, electron dense granules about 30 nm in diameter. Because of the aggregation of granules and their arrangement within the parasitophorous vacuole, the impression was sometimes gained by light microscopy that parasites were surrounded by a sheath or cyst wall. However, a cyst wall was not present. In host cells, spherical, membrane-bound bodies with a homogeneous, electron dense core and a maximum diameter of 0.25 μm were filed along the limiting membrane of the parasitophorous vacuole. These extra-intestinal parasites were considered to be waiting stages, with a biological function similar to that of the tissue cyst stage of other genera of isosporan coccidia.