Ticks and Tick-Borne Diseases (May 2024)

Ultrastructural characterization and quantification of hemocytes in engorged female Amblyomma sculptum ticks

  • Andressa Aparecida de Lima Reis,
  • Barbara Rauta de Avelar,
  • Marisa Beatriz da Silva Rocha,
  • Debora Azevedo Borges,
  • Diefrey Ribeiro Campos,
  • Jessica Fiorotti,
  • Patrícia Silva Golo,
  • Fabio Barbour Scott

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 3
p. 102312

Abstract

Read online

Amblyomma sculptum (formerly Amblyomma cajennense) ticks have been implicated in the transmission of pathogens that cause diseases in animals and humans. Their wide geographic distribution and high impact on animal health and zoonotic disease transmission highlight the importance of studying and implementing effective control measures to mitigate the risks associated with this tick species. The aim of this study was to quantify and characterize the morphology and the ultrastructure of different types of hemocytes in the hemolymph in engorged A. sculptum females fed on rabbits. The hemolymph samples were collected by perforation of the cuticle in the dorsal region. Hemocyte types, sizes, and differential counts were determined using light microscopy, while ultrastructural analysis of hemocytes was performed using transmission electron microscopy. The average number of total hemocytes in the hemolymph was 1024 ± 597.6 cells µL−1. Five morphologically distinct cell types were identified in A. sculptum females: prohemocytes (6 % ± 8.8), plasmatocytes (10 % ± 7.7), granulocytes (78 % ± 12.2), spherulocytes (5 % ± 4.48), and oenocytoids (1 % ± 1.6). In general, prohemocytes were the smallest hemocytes. The ultrastructural morphology of A. sculptum hemocytes described in the present study agrees with the findings for other hard ticks. This is the first study to investigate ultrastructural characteristics of hemocytes of female A. sculptum ticks.

Keywords