Description: English: Giardia intestinalis (Giardia intestinalis ). Optical microscopy technique: Bright field. Magnification: 6000x (for picture width 26 cm ~ A4 format).Čeština: Giardia (Giardia intestinalis ). Mikroskopická technika: Světlé pole. Zvětšení: 6000x (při šířce obrázku 26 cm ~ A4 formát). : This image comes from the archive of Josef Reischig and is part of the 384 pictures kindly donated by the authorship heirs under CC BY SA 3.0 license as a part of Wikimedia Czech Republic's GLAM initiative. čeština ∙ English ∙ македонски ∙ +/−. Source: Author's archive. Author: Doc. RNDr. Josef Reischig, CSc..
Description: English: Video of co-culture at day 0. The co-culture consisting of Caco-2 cells and IC-21 macrophages was assembled as described and incubated for 3 days. Giardia trophozoites were then added at 100,000 total parasites and a video was taken immediately. Date: 2013. Source: Video S1 from Fisher B, Estrano C, Cole J (2013). "Modeling Long-Term Host Cell-Giardia lamblia Interactions in an In Vitro Co-Culture System". PLOS ONE. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0081104. PMID24312526. PMC: 3849038. Author: Fisher B, Estrano C, Cole J. Permission (Reusing this file): : This file is licensed under the Creative CommonsAttribution 3.0 Unported license.:. You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work to remix – to adapt the work Under the following conditions: attribution – You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work). http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 CC BY 3.0 Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 truetrue. Provenance: This file was transferred to Wikimedia Commons from PubMed Central by way of the Open Access Media Importer.: .
Octomitus is a diplomonad with a broadly pyriform cell body tapered posteriorly, (10-15 µm), bearing six anterior flagella deflected backwards and two posterior trailing flagella. The two anterior nuclei are bean-shaped, they face up and adjoin each other in their anterior part. A large endosome is present in the anterior lobe of the nuclei. The two sets of flagella emerge on each side of the anterior part of the body. The two recurrent flagella, accompanied by a sheath of reticulum, traverse the cell, forming a central axis before emerging as trailing flagella. Two spikes are located at the posterior between the two trailing flagella. There is no cytostomal opening at the emergence of the trailing flagella in contrast to Spironucleus. Anaerobic, parasitic or endocommensal in the intestine of vertebrates such as amphibians, caecum of rodents, rumen. Octomitus intestinalis from mice with two posterior flagella (phase contrast)
Octomitus is a diplomonad with a broadly pyriform cell body tapered posteriorly, (10-15 µm), bearing six anterior flagella deflected backwards and two posterior trailing flagella. The two anterior nuclei are bean-shaped, they face up and adjoin each other in their anterior part. A large endosome is present in the anterior lobe of the nuclei. The two sets of flagella emerge on each side of the anterior part of the body. The two recurrent flagella, accompanied by a sheath of reticulum, traverse the cell, forming a central axis before emerging as trailing flagella. Two spikes are located at the posterior between the two trailing flagella. There is no cytostomal opening at the emergence of the trailing flagella in contrast to Spironucleus. Anaerobic, parasitic or endocommensal in the intestine of vertebrates such as amphibians, caecum of rodents, rumen. Octomitus intestinalis from mice with two anterior nuclei, six antero-lateral flagella and two posterior flagella which traverse the cell axially (Giemsa staining)
Giardia (gee-arr-dee-a), a diplomonad flagellate that is a common inhabitant of the human intestine. These are diplomonads, they have two nuclei (anterior), and two sets with four flagella each arising from the front end of the cell but extending to the side or posteriorly. Normally they clamp onto cells of the intestine, and heavy infections can lead to cells being ripped from the gut wall leading to bloody diarrhoea. Phase contrast.
Giardia (gee-arr-dee-a), a diplomonad flagellate that is a common inhabitant of the human intestine. These are diplomonads, they have two nuclei (anterior), and two sets with four flagella each arising from the front end of the cell but extending to the side or posteriorly. Normally they clamp onto cells of the intestine, and heavy infections can lead to cells being ripped from the gut wall leading to bloody diarrhoea. Phase contrast.