| Literature DB >> 23469113 |
David Longbottom1, Morag Livingstone, Stephen Maley, Arjan van der Zon, Mara Rocchi, Kim Wilson, Nicholas Wheelhouse, Mark Dagleish, Kevin Aitchison, Sean Wattegedera, Mintu Nath, Gary Entrican, David Buxton.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Latency is a key feature of the animal pathogen Chlamydia abortus, where infection remains inapparent in the non-pregnant animal and only becomes evident during a subsequent pregnancy. Often the first sign that an animal is infected is abortion occurring late in gestation. Despite this, little is understood of the underlying mechanisms that control latency or the recrudescence of infection that occurs during subsequent pregnancy. The aim of this study was to develop an experimental model of latency by mimicking the natural route of infection through the intranasal inoculation of non-pregnant sheep with C. abortus. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23469113 PMCID: PMC3585262 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0057950
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Number of ewes recorded daily with elevated (≥40°C) rectal temperatures following intranasal inoculation with 5
×10×10×10 , or subcutaneously injected with 2×10 None of the ewes inoculated with control inoculum (Group 4a) developed elevated rectal temperatures.
The clinical outcome of pregnancy in year 1 for ewes intranasally inoculated with C. abortus prior to pregnancy (group1–3), intranasally administered control inoculum (group 4a) or subcutaneously injected with C. abortus at 70 days of gestation (group 5).
| Group | Number of ewes | Number of lambs | |||||
| Pregnant | Lambed (%) | Aborted (%) | Mean gestational length | Viable | Non-viable | Dead | |
| 1 | 16 | 6 (41) | 10 (59) | 125 | 8 | 4 | 8 |
| 2 | 18 | 6 (33) | 12 (67) | 127 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
| 3 | 19 | 18 (95) | 1 (5) | 141 | 25 | 1 | 1 |
| 4a | 8 | 8 (100) | 0 (0) | 144 | 10 | 1 | 0 |
| 5 | 6 | 3 (50) | 3 (50) | 134 | 4 | 0 | 5 |
Includes neonatal deaths (born live but died within 48 hrs) and stillbirths.
Death due to dystocia.
Detection of pathological changes, C. abortus organisms and genomic DNA in the placentas of ewes intranasally inoculated with C. abortus prior to pregnancy (group1–3), intranasally administered control inoculum (group 4a) or subcutaneously injected with C. abortus at 70 days of gestation (group 5).
| Group | Pregnancy outcome | Lesions | mZN | qPCR |
| 1 | LambedAborted | 2+, 4−7+, 3+/− | 2+, 4−10+ | 7.43×104 (6.15×104) [1.13×103]4.20×106 (1.09×106) [3.54×106] |
| 2 | LambedAborted | 1+/−, 5−7+, 2+/−, 1−, 2 ns | 2+, 4−12+ | 8.52×102 (7.50×102) [1.22×102]4.73×106 (1.03×106) [4.43×106] |
| 3 | LambedAborted | 3+, 15− | 3+, 15− | 4.34×105 (2.84×105) [6.85×101]2.36×105 |
| 4a | LambedAborted | 8− | 8− | 2.4×101 (1.4×101) [1.1×101] |
| 5 | LambedAborted | 1+, 2−3+ | 1+, 2−3+ | 7.15×102 (5.49×102) [1.93×102]4.76×106 (1.69×106) [5.41×106] |
see Table 1.
number of ewes with histopathological lesions in placental samples: +, lesions characteristic of C. abortus infection; +/−, mild non-specific changes; −, no lesions observed; ns, no samples available.
detection of chlamydial EBs following mZN staining of smears (swabs used where placentas were not available): +, positive for chlamydial antigen; −, no EBs detected.
mean (+/− SEM) [median] of the number of C. abortus genomes detected per µl total DNA swab extract.
includes lamb that died as a result of dystocia.
considered negative as below the background level of 40 genome copies.
Figure 2Histopathological changes and immunohistochemical detection of chlamydial antigen in sheep infected with C. abortus.
(A) Cross-section of an affected placental membrane at 138 days gestation (dg) from a ewe intranasally administered 5×103 IFU C. abortus (group 1), showing necrosis and sloughing of the chorionic epithelium (n) and inflammation in the underlying mesenchyme (i), HE. (B) Immunohistochemical labelling of C. abortus LPS in the placenta of a control ewe (group 5; subcutaneously infected with 2×106 IFU C. abortus) at 141 dg; note intense labelling (brown colouration) of chlamydial inclusions and antigen in chorionic epithelial cells displaying signs of acute degeneration. (C) Immunohistochemical labelling of placenta sampled at 102 dg from a ewe intranasally administered 5×103 IFU C. abortus (group 1), showing an area of diffuse and granular positive labelling for C. abortus antigen associated with the destruction and loss of the chorionic epithelium. (D) Cross-section through a placentome at 138 dg from a ewe intranasally administered 5×105 IFU C. abortus (group 2), showing the interdigitating caruncular septum (s) and fetal placental villus (v). Note the light inflammation and pockets of positively labelled chlamydial antigen in the septal tissue and the proportionately greater villous labelling along with necrotic changes. (E) Section of fetal forebrain sampled at 138 days gestation from a ewe intranasally administered 5×103 IFU C. abortus (group 1) showing periventricular leucomalacia (pl), HE. (F) Section of fetal liver sampled at 136 days gestation from a ewe intranasally administered 5×105 IFU C. abortus (group 2), HE; note the focal necrosis (n) and periportal inflammation (arrow).
Figure 3Serological responses in ewes that aborted (includes non-viable births and stillbirths) (-▴-) and lambed (-▪-) following intranasal inoculation with 5×103 (A; Group 1), 5×105 (B; Group 2) or 5×107 (C; Group 3) IFU C. abortus or intranasally administered negative control inoculum (D; Group 4a; all lambed) (…x…) prior to pregnancy, or subcutaneously injected with 2×106 IFU at 70 days of gestation (D; Group 5).
Means (± SEM) of normalised responses (see Materials and Methods) are shown. 100% is equivalent to an OD450nm of 2.25. The lambing/abortion periods for years 1 and 2 are indicated by the horizontal double-headed arrows. Year 1 only for Groups 4a and 5 (D).
Figure 4IFN-γ production from PBMC restimulated with UV-killed C. abortus antigen in vitro.
PBMC was prepared from whole blood from ewes, restimulated in vitro with UV-killed C. abortus antigen and culture supernatants harvested for analysis using the BOVIGAM™ commercial ELISA to determine the concentration (in pg/ml) of IFN-γ produced (see Materials and Methods). The data are log10 transformed means (± SEM) of normalised responses for each group following intranasal inoculation with 5×103 (Group 1 -▪-), 5×105 (Group 2 -▴-) or 5×107 (Group 3 -♦-) IFU C. abortus or negative control inoculum (Group 4a -+-) prior to pregnancy; or subcutaneous injection with 2×106 IFU C. abortus at 70 days of gestation (Group 5 -•-).
Year 2 clinical outcomes of lambing.
| Group | Number of ewes | Number not in lamb | Number of singles/twins | Number of live/dead lambs | Number of placentas retrieved |
| 1 | 16 | 0 | 12/4 | 18/2 | 14/16 |
| 2 | 17 | 1 | 5/11 | 26/1 | 16/16 |
| 3 | 17 | 1 | 8/8 | 23/1 | 15/16 |
| 4b | 10 | 0 | 8/2 | 11/1 | 10/10 |
euthanised lamb.