Abstract

Background

Panstrongylus lutzi (Neiva & Pinto, 1923) is a triatomine species native to Caatinga habitats in north-eastern Brazil. It is considered an important vector of Chagas disease in this region, presenting high rates of natural infection with Trypanosoma cruzi Chagas, 1909, and readily invading houses by flight. This study describes a previously unknown chromosomal sex system in the genus Panstrongylus based on P. lutzi.

Methods

Fifth-instar and male adults of P. lutzi originating from municipality of Varzea Alegre, Ceara (Brazil) were analysed. Chromosomal analyses of male meiotic process were done by Giemsa staining.

Results

Chromosomal analyses of male meiosis reveal a diploid chromosome number of 24 chromosomes (20 autosomes plus X1X2X3Y). During meiotic prophase I, the sex chromosomes remained close together, forming four heteropycnotic chromocenters in zygotene, and a single chromocenter in pachytene and diplotene. Still at the diplotene stage, each one of the ten autosomal bivalents showed an evident chiasma. In metaphase I, the four sex chromosomes appeared clearly separated. The three X chromosomes were the smallest of the complement and isopycnotic with respect to the Y chromosome. Two bivalents appear larger, whereas the other eight showed no significant difference in size.

Conclusion

Karyotype analysis of P. lutzi revealed a new sex system in the genus Panstrongylus. This result is of utmost importance to karyosystematics of P. lutzi, and demonstrates the need for further studies of this type in the subfamily Triatominae.

Details

Title
New sex-determination system in the genus Panstrongylus (Hemiptera: Reduviidae) revealed by chromosomal analysis of Panstrongylus lutzi
Author
Silvia Menezes dos Santos; Silvia das Gracas Pompolo; Monte Goncalves, Teresa Cristina; Simone Patricia Carneiro de Freitas; Elizabeth Ferreira Rangel; Jacenir Reis dos Santos-Mallet
Publication year
2016
Publication date
2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
1756-3305
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1797451473
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2016