Dactylosoma is a genus of parasitic alveolates of the phylum Apicomplexa.[1]
Species in this genus have two hosts in their life cycle: the vertebrate host is a fish or amphibian (possibly also reptiles) and the invertebrate host is a glossiphoniid leech (Glossiphoniidae).
This genus was described by Labbé in 1894. The type species is Dactylosoma ranarum.
Merogony
Schizonts in this genus produce 6 to 16 merozoites by simultaneous exogenous budding. These typically are found in a fan shaped arrangement. This occurs within the erythrocytes.
Secondary merogony produces 6 smaller merozoites that are destined to become intraerythrocytic gamonts.
Gametogony
The gametocytes are larger, elongated forms derived from some of the merozoites.
Oocysts are formed after fertilization in the leech intestine. 30 or more sporozoites are produced by exogenous budding directly in the cytoplasm of the intestinal epithelial cells. No oocyst wall is formed.
Úngari et al. (2020) recognised six species of Dactylosoma known globally. Two of these are described from fish hosts, and the remaining four species from anuran hosts, namely Dactylosoma ranarum (Kruse, 1890) described from the European frog Pelophylax kl. esculentus; Dactylosoma sylvatica Fanthan, Porter and Richardson, 1942 reported in Lithobates sylvatica from Quebec, Canada; Dactylosoma taiwanensis Manwell, 1964 described infecting Fejervarya limnocharis collected in Taiwan; and Dactylosoma kermiti described infecting the anurans, Ptychadena anchietae and Sclerophrys gutturalis from South Africa. Dactylosoma piperis was described in 2020 from the pepper frog Leptodactylus labyrinthicus (Anura, Leptodactylidae) from Mato Grosso State, Brazil.[2]