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TITLE: Comparison of polymerase chain-reaction and culture methods
for detection of mycoplasma-pulmonis from nasal, tracheal and oral swab
samples of rats
AUTHOR: GOTO_K, KUNITA_S, TERADA_E, ITOH_T
JOURNAL: EXPERIMENTAL ANIMALS, 1994, VOL.43, NO.3, PP.413-415
AB: The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and culture methods
were
used to detect Mycoplasma pulmonis in nasal, tracheal and oral
swab samples of rats derived from 5 mycoplasma-contaminated and
2 mycoplasma-free facilities, and the results of both methods
were compared. Thirty-four/54 and 30/54 in nasal samples, 31/54
and 28/54 in tracheal samples, and 12/39 and 30/39 in oral
samples were positive in PCR and cultures, respectively.
Agreements in the results of both tests were 48/54 (88.9%) in
nasal samples and 49/54 (90.7%) in tracheal samples. This
indicates that nasal and tracheal samples are useful for
detecting M. pulmonis by PCR. The detection number for M.
pulmonis from the oral cavity by PCR was remarkably lower than
those of nasal and tracheal sites. These results show that the
PCR method has significant potential as a rapid and sensitive
method for detecting M. pulmonis in clinical samples collected
from the nasal cavity and trachea.
WA: CULTURE, MYCOPLASMA-PULMONIS, PCR, RAT
TI: Dexamethasone and oxytetracycline reverse the potentiation of neurogenic
inflammation in airways of rats with mycoplasma-pulmonis infection
AUTHOR:BOWDEN_JJ, SCHOEB_TR, LINDSEY_JR, MCDONALD_DM
JOURNAL: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE,
1994, Vol.150, No.5, pp.1391-1401
AB: Mycoplasma pulmonis infection in rats causes a chronic
inflammatory airway disease. Along with extensive remodeling
of
the airway mucosa, lymphocytic infiltrates, angiogenesis, and
mucosal thickening, there is an abnormal sensitivity of the
blood vessels to mediators that evoke ''neurogenic
inflammation.'' As a result, substance P, a peptide released
from sensory nerves, produces an unusually large amount of
plasma leakage. These changes can be prevented or reduced by
prophylactic treatment with antibiotics, but it is unknown
whether the extensive remodeling of the airway mucosa and
potentiation of neurogenic inflammation can be reversed once
they are established. We addressed this issue in F344 rats that
were infected with M. pulmonis at 8 wk of age. Six weeks later,
the rats were treated daily with an antibiotic
(oxytetracycline, 20 mg/kg intramuscularly), to reduce the
number of infecting organisms, or with an antiinflammatory
steroid (dexamethasone, 0.5 mg/kg intraperitoneally), to reduce
the inflammatory and immunologic response to the infection.
Sham-treated infected rats received daily injections of 0.9%
NaCl. After 1, 2, or 4 wk of treatment the rats were
anesthetized and then challenged with substance P (5 mu g/kg
intravenously). The sham-treated rats had pathologic changes
in
their airways typical of severe M. pulmonis infection, and had
as much as a threefold increase in substance P-induced plasma
leakage. By comparison, after 4 wk of treatment with
oxytetracycline or dexamethasone the chronic inflammation was
nearly resolved and the response to substance P was in the
normal range. Unexpectedly dexamethasone, like oxytetracycline,
reduced the number of infecting organisms. We conclude that the
potentiation of neurogenic inflammation and many of the other
changes associated with the chronic airway disease produced by
M. pulmonis infection can be reversed by antibiotics or
antiinflammatory steroids.
KP: MURINE RESPIRATORY MYCOPLASMOSIS, SENDAI VIRUS-INFECTION, NECROSIS-FACTOR-ALPHA,
RAT TRACHEA, NEUTRAL ENDOPEPTIDASE, PLASMA EXTRAVASATION, SUBSTANCE-P,
LYMPHOCYTE-T, F344 RATS, LEW RATS
Mycoplasma-pulmonis 46-kda trypsin-resistant protein adheres to rat
tracheal epithelial-cells
AUTHOR: BEYERS_TM, LAI_WC, READ_RW, PAKES_SP
JOURNAL: LABORATORY ANIMAL SCIENCE, 1994, Vol.44, No.6, pp.573-578
AB: Results of competitive binding studies with radiolabeled and
unlabeled Mycoplasma pulmonis and rat tracheal explant cultures
indicated no effect of trypsin treatment on the ability of M.
pulmonis to bind to explants. A trypsin-resistant 46-kDa
membrane protein, which binds isolated rat tracheal epithelial
cells in culture, was purified and used to produce specific
antibodies that block adhesion of mycoplasmas to tracheal
explants. These results suggest that M. pulmonis adheres to rat
tracheal epithelium via a trypsin-resistant 46-kDa protein.
KP: RESPIRATORY EPITHELIUM, PNEUMONIAE, GALLISEPTICUM, ERYTHROCYTES,
ATTACHMENT
Effect of time of exposure to rat coronavirus and mycoplasma-pulmonis
on respiratory-tract lesions in the wistar rat
AUTHOR: SCHUNK_MK, PERCY_DH, ROSENDAL_S
JOURNAL: CANADIAN JOURNAL OF VETERINARY RESEARCH-REVUE CANADIENNE
DE RECHERCHE VETERINAIRE, 1995, Vol.59, No.1, pp.60-66
AB: The effects of time of exposure on the progression of pulmonary
lesions in rats inoculated with Mycoplasma pulmonis and the rat
coronavirus, sialodacryoadenitis virus (SDAV) were studied,
using six groups of 18 SPF Wistar rats (n = 108). Rats were
inoculated intranasally as follows: Group 1, sterile medium
only; Group 2, sterile medium followed one week later by 150
TCID50 SDAV; Group 3, sterile medium followed by 10(5.7) colony
forming units of Ill. pulmonis; Group 4, SDAV followed one week
later by ill. pulmonis; Group 5, Ill. pulmonis followed one
week later by SDAV; Group 6, M. pulmonis followed two weeks
later by SDAV. Six rats from each group were euthanized at one,
two and three weeks after the final inoculation. In a separate
experiment, six additional animals were inoculated in each of
groups 3, 5 and 6 (n = 18) and were sampled at five weeks after
they had received Ill. palmonis. Bronchoalveolar lavage and
quantitative lung mycoplasma cultures were conducted on two-
thirds of the rats. Histopathological examination and scoring
of lesion severity were performed on all animals. Based on the
prevalence and extent of histopathological lesions,
bronchoalveolar lavage cell numbers, neutrophil differential
cell counts and the isolation of M. pulmonis, the most severe
disease occurred in the groups that received both agents. There
was no significant difference in lesion severity between the
groups receiving both agents other than in those examined
during the acute stages of SDAV infection. Based on these
results, it is evident that SDAV enhances lower respiratory
tract disease in Wistar rats whether exposure occurs at one
week prior to or at various intervals following M. pulmonis
infections.
KP: VIRUS-INFECTION, SENDAI VIRUS, SIALODACRYOADENITIS, EXACERBATION,
CALVES
TI: Effects of aging on antibody avidity to mycoplasma-pulmonis
AUTHOR: STEFFEN_MJ, EBERSOLE_JL
JOURNALMECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT, 1995, Vol.78, No.2, pp.123-144
AB: Antibody avidity of serum and lung lavage responses was
examined in rats to determine aging effects on functional
differences in antibody to Mycoplasma pulmonis. Three age
groups of animals (weanling, adult and senescent) were
immunized with either of two doses of formalinized M. pulmonis
as the antigen, or a placebo control. Total immunoglobulin
levels and specific antibody responses were examined in serum
and lung lavage fluids and subsequently avidity measurements of
the same samples were made for the specific antibody to M.
pulmonis. The concentration of NH4SCN that dissociated 50% of
the antibody was used to determine the avidity index of the
serum and lung lavage samples. Total serum IgG and IgA were
decreased in the weanling animals when compared to the other
two age groups of animals. In contrast, serum IgA levels were
substantially increased in senescent animals. Significant
increases in serum IgA levels were noted following immunization
that was not observed for IgG levels. Substantial increases in
both serum antibody and lung lavage antibody were observed in
response to immunization with either dose of antigen, but only
the lung lavage samples showed both IgG and IgA isotypes
differences that were attributable to age. Serum IgG avidity
indices gradually increased over time following immunization
with higher indices being observed in the weanling animals
immunized with the higher M. pulmonis dose. Serum IgA avidity
indices also increased over time with no significant
differences noted among the age groups. Lung lavage IgG avidity
demonstrated slightly higher indices in the weanling animals,
while lung lavage IgA avidity showed higher avidity indices in
the senescent animals at the higher antigen dose. These data
suggest that senescent animals are capable of producing an
apparently functional antibody response and that differences
noted in increased disease susceptibility in older animals may
be attributed to mechanisms other than a dysfunctional humoral
immune response at mucosal surfaces.
KP: IMMUNOGLOBULIN-G ANTIBODY, AGED MICE, IMMUNE-RESPONSES, INTERLEUKIN-2
PRODUCTION, LYMPHOID-TISSUES, CHOLERA-TOXIN, IGG-AVIDITY, T-CELLS, INFECTION,
VIRUS
WA: MYCOPLASMA PULMONIS, ANTIBODY AVIDITY, SERUM IGG, SERUM IGA
Protection against mycoplasma-pulmonis infection by genetic vaccination
AUTHOR: LAI_WC, BENNETT_M, JOHNSTON_SA, BARRY_MA, PAKES_SP
JOURNAL: DNA AND CELL BIOLOGY, 1995, Vol.14, No.7, pp.643-651
AB: The induction of an immune response against a foreign protein
usually requires purification of that protein, which is
injected into animals. The isolation of a pure protein is time
consuming and costly. Recently, a technique called biolistic
transformation (biological ballistic system) microparticle
injection, gene gun, or particle bombardment was developed. The
basic idea is that the DNA or biological material coated onto
heavy tungsten or gold particles is shot into target cells or
animals. We have vaccinated mice by introducing the gene
(Mycoplasma pulmonis DNA or a specific fragment) encoding a
protein recognized by a protective monoclonal antibody directly
into the skin or muscle of mice by two methods: (i) using a
hand-held form of the biolistic system that can propel DNA-
coated gold microprojectiles (2 mu g of DNA) directly into the
skin; (ii) using a conventional intramuscular injection of the
DNA (100 mu g) into quadricep muscles of transfected mice. HeLa
cells were transfected in vitro by the gene gun or by the
liposomal delivery system. Indirect immuno-fluorescent antibody
(IFA) assay of culture cells indicated that both methods could
be successful. Production of antibody and cell-mediated
immunity against M. pulmonis were monitored by assaying serum
IFA and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and delayed
type hypersensitivity. In addition, macrophage migration
inhibition and lymphocyte transformation to antigen in spleen
cells were also tested. Both delivery systems induced humoral
and cellular immunity, and vaccinated the mice against
infection. Genetic immunization by using the gene gun saves
time, money, and labor; moreover, this general method is also
applicable to gene therapy.
KP: IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1, PLASMID DNA, IMMUNE-RESPONSES, MUSCLE
INVIVO, MOUSE MUSCLE, MICE, IMMUNIZATION, EXPRESSION,INJECTION, INFLUENZA
Natural uterine mycoplasma-pulmonis infection in female rats
AUTHOR: BUSCH_K, NAGLIC_T
JOURNAL: VETERINARNI MEDICINA, 1995, Vol.40, No.8, pp.253-255
AB: Uterine washings from 124 apparently healthy and non-pregnant
female Wistar rats of different ages were cultured for
mycoplasmas and bacteria. The animals originated from four
conventional breeding colonies which were known to be
chronically infected with M. pulmonis from the previous
microbiological examination. Mycoplasmas were isolated from the
uterus in 30.6% of examined females. All the isolates were
biochemically and serologically identified as M. pulmonis.
Uterine colonization with this organism was first evidenced in
non-mated female rats at the age of three months. After mating
the number of infected females rapidly increased. This
observation points out the microbiologically uncontrolled
mating as an important factor in the distribution of genital
infection within the colony. Bacterial examination of uterine
washings revealed only ubiquitous organisms in some animals.
Gross lesions in the form of purulent salpingitis and mild
endometritis were observed only in two animals.
WA: MYCOPLASMA PULMONIS, UTERINE INFECTION,
RAT, WISTAR
Changes in pulmonary calcitonin-gene-related peptide and protein-gene-product-9.5
innervation in rats infected with mycoplasma-pulmonis
AUTHOR: NOHR_D, BUOB_A, GARTNER_K, WEIHE_E
JOURNAL: CELL AND TISSUE RESEARCH, 1996, Vol.283, No.2, pp.215-219
AB: Changes in the expression of calcitonin gene-related peptide
(CGRP) and polyneural protein gene product 9.5 (PGP) in hilar
peribronchial innervation was investigated by
immunohistochemistry in specific pathogen-free rats chronically
infected with Mycoplasma pulmonis. Image analysis of
immunostained sections revealed a reduction of approximately
62% in the amount of CGRP- and PGP-immunoreactive innervation
of the peribronchial area in the infected animals. The portion
of the total bronchial perimeter occupied by bronchus-
associated lymphoid tissue was increased six-fold. The decrease
in the CGRP-immunoreactive area could be the result either of
an enhanced CGRP release or of a loss of nerve fibres. The
decrease in the PGP-immunoreactive fibres indicates a
degenerative loss of nerves. Increased bronchus-associated
lymphoid tissue and decreased bronchial innervation by neurons
releasing the immunomodulatory neuropeptide CGRP might both
contribute to the pathophysiology and symptoms of mycoplasmosis
in the rat.
KP: SUBSTANCE-P, LYMPHOCYTES, CELLS, INFLAMMATION, ANTIBODIES, RECEPTORS,
CGRP
WA: LUNG, NEURO-IMMUNE LINK, CALCITONIN GENE-RELATED PEPTIDE, PROTEIN
GENE PRODUCT 9.5, BRONCHUS-ASSOCIATED LYMPHOID TISSUE, IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY,
MYCOPLASMA PULMONIS, RAT (LEW/ZTM)
Sensory denervation by neonatal capsaicin treatment exacerbates mycoplasma-pulmonis
infection in rat airways
AUTHOR:: BOWDEN_JJ, BALUK_P, LEFEVRE_PM, SCHOEB_TR, LINDSEY_JR, MCDONALD_DM
JOURNAL: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LUNG CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR
PHYSIOLOGY, 1996, Vol.14, No.3, pp.L 393-L 403
AB: Mycoplasma pulmonis infection in rats results in life-long
disease, characterized by chronic inflammation of the airway
mucosa with widespread accumulation of lymphoid tissue, mucous
cell hyperplasia, and mucosal thickening. In addition, there is
angiogenesis and increased sensitivity of mucosal blood vessels
to substance P (SP), so tachykinins released from sensory nerve
fibers cause an abnormally large amount of plasma leakage. We
sought to learn whether the sensory nerves influence the
severity of the chronic inflammatory response of M. pulmonis
infection. Our strategy was to destroy the nerves by capsaicin
pretreatment at birth, infect the rats with M. pulmonis at 8 wk
of age, and then study the animals 6 wk later. We found that
capsaicin pretreatment increased the severity of the infection,
exaggerated the pathological changes in the tracheal mucosa,
and increased the amount of SP-induced plasma leakage, as
quantified with Monastral blue. The thickness of the tracheal
mucosa in these infected rats was 80% greater than in their
vehicle-pretreated counterparts and 200% greater than in the
pathogen-free controls. The area density of Monastral blue-
labeled blood vessels averaged 20% in the infected rats
pretreated with capsaicin, which represented a 40-fold increase
over the leakage in the pathogen-free group. By comparison, the
amount of Monastral blue labeling was only 13% in rats
pretreated with vehicle (P < 0.05), which was a 22-fold
increase over the corresponding pathogen-free group. The number
of SP-immunoreactive nerves fibers was reduced both by neonatal
capsaicin and by infection (87 and 63% reductions,
respectively); but when the two conditions were combined, their
effects were not additive (79% reduction), perhaps because of
nerve regrowth. We conclude that destruction of sensory nerves
increases the severity of infection-induced chronic
inflammation in the airway mucosa, with exaggerated mucosal
thickening, angiogenesis, plasma leakage, and nerve remodeling.
KP: MURINE RESPIRATORY MYCOPLASMOSIS, SUBSTANCE-P, NEUROGENIC INFLAMMATION,
TRACHEAL EPITHELIUM, IMMUNE-RESPONSE, VIRUS-INFECTION, NERVE-FIBERS, F344
RATS, TRACT, NEUROPEPTIDES
WA: ANGIOGENESIS, CHRONIC INFLAMMATION, IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY, NERVE
REGROWTH, PGP 9.5, PLASMA LEAKAGE, SENSORY NERVES, SUBSTANCE P
Experimental genital mycoplasmosis - time of infection influences pregnancy
outcome
AUTHOR: BROWN_MB, STEINER_DA
JOURNAL: INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, 1996, Vol.64, No.6, pp.2315-2321
AB: Genital infection of rats with Mycoplasma pulmonis causes
adverse pregnancy outcome and can result in in utero spread of
infection to the fetus. The current study was designed to
determine whether the stage of pregnancy when infection occurs
influences pregnancy outcome. Rats were inoculated with 3 x
10(7) CFU of M. pulmonis at 10 days prior to breeding (-10) or
at gestational day (gd) 11 or 14 and were necropsied at gd 11,
14, or 18 or within 24 h of parturition (term). Control rats
received sterile broth, M. pulmonis was isolated from the
placenta, amniotic fluid, or fetal tissues only from rats
infected prior to breeding (P < 0.001), All infected rats had
significantly more loss of pups than did control rats (P <
0.006), but rats infected prior to breeding or at the beginning
of the third trimester (gd 14) were much more likely to have
fetal losses. Rats infected in the early second trimester after
implantation (gd 11) did not experience severe losses, Litter
sizes, total litter weight, and individual pup weight from all
infected rats, regardless of gestational stage when infected,
were significantly smaller than those of control rats (P <
0.001). On the basis of the results of this study, we conclude
that the time of infection plays a major role in determination
of pregnancy outcome and spread of infection from the genital
tract to the respiratory tract.
KP: SPRAGUE-DAWLEY RATS, PULMONIS, TRACT, HOST
Detection of Mycoplasma pulmonis in cilia-associated respiratory Bacillus
isolates and in respiratory tracts of ratsby nested PCR
AUTHOR: Schoeb_TR, Dybvig_K, Keisling_KF, Davidson_MK, Davis_JK
JOURNAL: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY, 1997, Vol.35, No.7,
pp.1667-1670
AB: To improve the detection of Mycoplasma pulmonis contamination
of isolates of cilia-associated respiratory (CAR) bacillus, we
developed a nested PCR method using primers for 16S rRNA gene
sequences, Of 140 samples of 16 different CAR bacillus
isolates, 73 (52%) were inhibitory in the first PCR as
indicated by the absence of amplicons of the internal control,
but only 11 of 140 (7.9%) were inhibitory in the second PCR Of
27 samples known to contain M. pulmonis, only 12 (44%) were
positive in the first PCR, but 25 of 27 (93%) were positive in
the second PCR, Nested PCR also detected M. pulmonis in 21 of
61 (34%) CAR bacillus samples from which M. pulmonis could not
be cultured and identified 2 additional M. pulmonis-
contaminated CAR bacillus isolates, Of 359 respiratory and
reproductive tract lavage samples from rats and mice, 35 (9.8%)
were inhibitory in the first PCR, but only 15 (4.2%) were
inhibitory in the second PCR, Of 72 lavage specimens from rats
inoculated with an avirulent, poorly infective M. pulmonis
strain, 14 (19%) were positive by nested PCR, but only 2 of 72
(2.8%) were positive by culture. Nested PCR also detected M.
pulmonis in 14 of 20 (70%) paraffin sections of lung and
trachea from rats and mice inoculated with CAR bacillus
isolates known to contain M. pulmonis, whereas single PCR gave
no positive results, We conclude that nested PCR is superior to
single PCR or culture for detecting M. pulmonis, and that M.
pulmonis is present in all but four CAR bacillus isolates in
our collection that were from naturally infected rats; the four
isolates that were exceptions were obtained from rats from a
single colony.
KP: POLYMERASE CHAIN-REACTION
Upregulation of substance P receptors in angiogenesis associated with
chronic airway inflammation in rats
AUTHOR: Baluk_P, Bowden_JJ, Lefevre_PM, McDonald_DM
JOURNAL: AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LUNG CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR
PHYSIOLOGY, 1997, Vol.17, No.3, pp.L565-L571
AB: In rat airways, substance P released from sensory nerves
induces plasma leakage via neurokinin-1 (NK1) receptors on
endothelial cells. In pathogen-free rats, both leakage and
endothelial NK1 receptors are most abundant in postcapillary
venules. In Mycoplasma pulmonis-infected rats, extensive
angiogenesis occurs in the tracheal mucosa. The capillary-sized
(<10 mu m in diameter) angiogenic blood vessels are abnormally
sensitive to substance P. The aim of this study was to
determine whether increased expression of NK1 receptors
contributes to this abnormal sensitivity. Fischer 344 rats were
infected with M. pulmonis and were challenged with substance
P
(5 mu g/kg iv), and then plasma leakage in the tracheal mucosa
was measured by extravasation of Monastral blue (30 mg/kg iv).
NK1 receptors on endothelial cells were localized by
immunohistochemistry. Five minutes after substance P, NK1
receptor-immunoreactive endosomes were five times more abundant
in endothelial cells of angiogenic capillaries in M. pulmonis-
infected rats than in corresponding capillaries in pathogen-
free controls (17.1 +/- 2.3 vs. 3.5 +/- 0.4 endosomes/100 mu
m(2) of endothelial surface). Endosomes were slightly more
abundant in postcapillary venules 15-35 mu m in diameter in
infected rats (23.0 +/- 0.6 vs. 19.2 +/- 0.7 endosomes/100 mu
m(2)). Similarly, after substance P, angiogenic capillaries had
much more Monastral blue labeling (area density: 18.8 +/- 1.5
vs. 2.9 +/- 0.5% of vessel wall), whereas postcapillary venules
had about the same amount of labeling (36.0 +/- 3.7 vs. 34.1
+/- 1.8%). We conclude that increased expression of NK1
receptors, which are internalized into endosomes after ligand
binding, contributes to the abnormal sensitivity of endothelial
cells of angiogenic blood vessels to substance P in the airways
of M. pulmonis-infected rats.
KP: MURINE RESPIRATORY MYCOPLASMOSIS,
NECROSIS-FACTOR-ALPHA, NEUROGENIC INFLAMMATION, GENE-EXPRESSION, VIRUS-INFECTION,
MESSENGER-RNAS, NK1 RECEPTOR, SPINAL-CORD, PULMONIS, POTENTIATION
WA: plasma leakage, vascular permeability, Mycoplasma pulmonis
infection, trachea, endosomes, tachykinins, bronchus-associated lymphoid
tissue, neurokinin-1 receptors
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