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Title: An experimental study of the pathology and ecology of Yersinia enterocolitica infection in mice. Author: Pearson AD, Ricciardi ID, Wright DH, Suckling WG. Journal: Contrib Microbiol Immunol; 1979; 5():335-45. PubMed ID: 535390. Abstract: Four experiments are described in which laboratory mice were infected with Y. enterocolitica using an American serotype 0:8 (WA) and two European strains, serotypes 0:3 and 0:9. The pathogenicity and histopathological responses of strain WA (0:8) were determined in the Porton white outbred mouse by three route of inoculation. The LD50 after infection by the intraperitoneal route was 8.8 x 10(1) organisms, which is similar to results obtained by previous workers using disease-free and hybrid mouse strains. European strains 0:3 and 0:9 were shown to infect the Porton white outbred mice when injected intraperitoneally but no deaths occurred. Chronic faecal excretion was demonstrated up to 135 days. Specific antibodies were detected in the 0:3 and 0:9 infected mice and the immune response was further assessed by challenging the excreter mice with 50LD50S of the virulent WA strain. A significant degree of protection occurred in mice previously injected with 10(7) organisms of the avirulent strains. No evidence of phenotypic variation, as measured by 40 markers, was detected in 67 isolates of Y. enterocolitica recovered during the course of the four experiments. These results suggest that laboratory rodents could be a useful model for studying the infection produced by virulent and avirulent strains, and since it has been clearly established that a wide range of serotypes and non-typeable strains may be isolated from wild rodents, our findings could be extrapolated to the wildlife situation. Further work on the laboratory model could give a more detailed insight into the mechanism and extent to which rodents act as reservoirs of Y. enterocolitica.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]