Abstract

Until now, there has been no answer to the question of whether specialized glial cells exist in the nervous system of platyhelminths. The identification of these cells in parasitic flatworms is difficult due to their organization as parenchymal animals. The goal of this study was to reveal and describe structural elements corresponding to the term glia in the CNS of the parasitic flatworm Grillotia erinaceus (Cestoda: Trypanorhyncha). Three types of glial cells are revealed. The first type consists of fibroblast-like cells located in the cerebral ganglia that contain fibrils and excrete onto the surface fibrillar material and possess desmosomes; the presumable function of fibroblast-like glial cells is the isolation and support of ganglionar neurons. Glial cells of the second type form a myelin-like envelope of giant axons and bulbar nerves of the scolex and have laminar cytoplasm; they are numerous and exceed the number of neurons in the composition of nerves. Glial cells of the third type form multilayer envelopes in the main nerve cords and make contacts with the excretory epithelium; however, specialized junctions with neurons were not found. The existence of glia in other free living and parasitic flatworms is discussed.

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