Pathogenesis and immune response toParacoccidioides brasiliensisin the fructivorous bat,Artibeus lituratus
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Medical Mycology
- Vol. 19 (3) , 165-178
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00362178185380281
Abstract
Groups of neotropical bats (Artibeus lituratus) were inoculated by the intraperitoneal or intranasal routes with varying doses of yeast phase Paracoccidioides brasiliensis. Bats infected with 106 viable yeast cells intraperitoneally developed fatal, disseminated disease, with delayed hypersensitivity appearing within 2 weeks. No precipitating antibodies were detected up to 7 weeks post-exposure. After intranasal instillation of 105 viable P. brasiliensis, the disease spread from the lung to the spleen by 3 weeks and to the liver by 9 weeks. As few as 10 viable cells were capable of causing pulmonary disease. Antibodies were detected at 5 weeks and persisted for several weeks thereafter. No viable P. brasiliensis was recovered from the intestines or fecal contents of any bats. Artibeus lituratus appears to be very susceptible to paracoccidioidomycosis by the respiratory route. The resulting immune response is characterized by delayed appearance of precipitating antibodies and a moderate degree of delayed hypersensitivity. The pathogenesis of the resulting disease is similar to that observed in humans. The absence of intestinal involvement, even in chronic systemic disease, suggests that bats do not play a direct role in dissemination of this fungus in nature. Se inocularon grupos de murciélagos neotropicales (Artibeus lituratus) con distintas dosis de levaduras de Paracoccidioides brasiliensis por vía intraperitoneal e intranasal. Los murciélagos infectados por vía intraperitoneal con células viables de levadura en concentración 106, acabaron con infecciones fatales, diseminadas, con hipersensibilidad retardada empezando después de 10 días, No se encontraron anticuerpos precipitantes hastas siete semanas después de la inoculación. Después de la infección intranasal con P. brasiliensis viable en concentración de 105, el hongo pasó del pulmón al bazo en 3 semanas y al hígado en 9 semanas. Fué posible producir una infección pulmonar con una cantidad de 10 células viables. Se encontraron anticuerpos después de 5 semanas y estos se mantuvieron durante varias semanas. No se aislaron P. brasiliensis del intestino ni de la materia fecal de los murciélagos. El murciélago Artibeus lituratus parece ser muy susceptible a la paracoccidioidomicosis por vía respiratoria. La respuesta inmunológica resultante se caracteriza por la aparición tardía de anticuerpos precipitantes y de una hipersensibilidad retardada moderada. La patogénesis de la infección resultante es parecida a la observada en humanos. La ausencia de infección en el intestino, aún en infecciones sistémicas crónicas, indica que el murciélago no juega un papel directo en la distribución de este hongo en la naturaleza.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experimental paracoccidioidomycosis in the syrian hamster: Morphology, ultrastructure and correlation of lesions with presence of specific antigens and serum levels of antibodiesMycopathologia, 1979
- Bovine experimental paracoccidioidomycosis intradermic test standardizationMedical Mycology, 1978
- Contribution to the epidemiology of paracoccidioidomycosis and histoplasmosis in the state of São Paulo, BrazilMedical Mycology, 1978
- Role of bats in the ecology ofParacoccidioides brasiliensis: The survival ofParacoccidioides brasiliensisin the intestinal tract of frugivorous bat,Artibeus lituratusMedical Mycology, 1977
- The gamut of paracoccidioidomycosisThe American Journal of Medicine, 1976
- Pathogenesis of Paracoccidioidomycosis: A model based on the study of 46 patientsMycopathologia, 1976
- La Prueba De Inmunodiffusion En El Diagnostico De La ParacoccidioidomicosisMedical Mycology, 1966
- Paracoccidioides brasiliensisrecovered from the intestinal tract of three bats (Artibeus lituratus) in Colombia, S.A.Medical Mycology, 1965
- Pathogenesis of South American blastomycosisTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1959
- A Study of the Cell and Colony Variations of Blastomyces DermatitidisThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1939