Isolation, propagation, and characterization of a newly recognized pathogen, cilia-associated respiratory bacillus of rats, an etiological agent of chronic respiratory disease
- 1 February 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 47 (2) , 472-479
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.47.2.472-479.1985
Abstract
A Gram-negative, filamentous, rod-shaped bacillus which failed to grow in cell-free media was isolated in apparently pure culture from the bronchial scraping and washing of a laboratory rat suffering from chronic respiratory disease by inoculating embryonated chicken eggs via the allantoic route. None of the embryos died during 20 serial passages at weekly intervals. The bacillus was reisolated in embryonated eggs from cesarean-derived barrier-maintained N:SD(SD) rats 8 and 12 wk after intranasal inoculation with 10th-passage allantoic fluid. The inoculated rats were housed in Horsfall-type units and remained free from other known respiratory pathogens, including mycoplasmas and murine viruses, throughout the study. The bacillus colonized the ciliated epithelial cells of the respiratory tract and caused a marked peribronchial infiltration and hyperplasia of mononuclear cells which progressed with time. The bacillus, .apprx. 0.2 .mu.m wide by 4-6 .mu.m long, stained very poorly with basic aniline dyes but was readily demonstrated with the Warthin-Starry silver technique. It was heat labile (56.degree. C for 30 min); spore forms were not observed. It withstood freeze-thawing and was successfully stored at -70.degree. C. Although no visible means of locomotion was observed by EM, a slow gliding motility, sometimes with bending and flexing of bacilli apparently adherent to the glass surface, was observed with phase microscopy. As an etiological agent of chronic respiratory disease of rats, this cilia-associated respiratory bacillus (tentatively designated the CAR bacillus) may be the first recognized gliding bacterium known to cause disease in a warm-blooded vertebrate.This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Filamentous Bacterium Associated with Respiratory Disease in Wild RatsVeterinary Pathology, 1981
- Respiratory disease in rats associated with a filamentous bacterium: a preliminary report.1980
- Experimental Mycoplasma pulmonis infection in pathogen-free mice. Models for studying mycoplasmosis of the respiratory tract.1973
- Respiratory disease in a colony of rats. II. Isolation ofMycoplasma pulmonisfrom the natural disease, and the experimental disease induced with a cloned culture of this organismEpidemiology and Infection, 1972
- Murine chronic respiratory disease. Significance as a research complication and experimental production with Mycoplasma pulmonis.1971
- Morphologic and microbiologic features of trachea and lungs in germfree, defined-flora, conventional, and chronic respiratory disease-affected rats.1971
- Pathogenicity of Mycoplasma pulmonis in laboratory rats.1969
- Chronic murine pneumonia of laboratory rats. Production and description of pulmonary-disease-free rats.1969
- The effect of orally administered sulfamerazine and chlortetracycline on chronic respiratory disease in rats.1963
- PULMONARY DISEASE IN RATS - A SURVEY WITH COMMENTS ON CHRONIC MURINE PNEUMONIA1956