Mycobacterium leprae in Mice: Minimal Infectious Dose, Relationship Between Staining Quality and Infectivity, and Effect of Cortisone
- 1 February 1965
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 89 (2) , 365-+
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.89.2.365-372.1965
Abstract
Shepard, Charles C. (Communicable Disease Center, U.S. Public Health Service, Atlanta, Ga.), and Dorothy H. McRae . Mycobacterium leprae in mice: minimal infectious dose, relationship between staining quality and infectivity, and effect of cortisone. J. Bacteriol. 89: 365–372. 1965.—The minimal infectious dose of Mycobacterium leprae in mouse foot pads was found to be on the order of 10 solidly staining bacilli. In a titration experiment, the actual number found was 3.4 to 34 solid bacilli, and the order of magnitude was confirmed by experience with inocula containing varying numbers of solidly staining leprosy bacilli from mouse passage and from clinical sources. The acid-fast staining quality of leprosy bacilli was related in a useful way to the subsequent rate at which bacillary growth appeared. When the proportion of solidly staining bacilli was high, the calculated generation time was shortest, and the lower the proportion, the longer the generation times. The results were in accord with the hypothesis that all viable bacilli are solid, and that when they die, most of them become nonsolid. Varying proportions of the dead bacilli, perhaps up to 10%, remain solid, at least temporarily. The growth curve of M. leprae in mice was followed in several experiments with total counts of acid-fast bacteria and determination of the ratio of solid bacilli. What had been called a maximal stationary phase was seen to consist of sequential phases of conversion of solid to nonsolid bacilli (death), reappearance of solid bacilli (growth), and conversion of solid to nonsolid bacilli (death). When cortisone was administered, leprosy bacilli grew somewhat more slowly during the logarithmic phase, but attained a higher level, especially of solidly staining bacilli.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multiplication of Mycobacterium leprae in the foot-pad of the mouse.1962
- The appearance of dead leprosy bacilli by light and electron microscopy.1962
- The nasal excretion of Mycobacterium leprae in leprosy.1962
- Fluorescent Antibody Stainability and Other Consequences of the Disruption of MycobacteriaExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1961
- ANALYSIS OF HOST-PARASITE EQUILIBRIUM IN CHRONIC MURINE TUBERCULOSIS BY TOTAL AND VIABLE BACILLARY COUNTS1961
- THE EXPERIMENTAL DISEASE THAT FOLLOWS THE INJECTION OF HUMAN LEPROSY BACILLI INTO FOOT-PADS OF MICEThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1960
- Application of Quantitative Electron Microscopy to the Study of Mycobacterium lepraemurium and M. lepraeJournal of General Microbiology, 1960
- Factors Influencing Degree of Infectivity of Enterovirus Ribonucleic Acid.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1960
- THE INFLUENCE OF CORTISONE AND HYDROCORTISONE ACETATES ON THE COURSE OF MYCOBACTERIUM LEPRAEMURIUM INFECTION IN RATSBritish Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy, 1958
- THE EFFECT OF CORTISONE ALONE AND IN COMBINATION WITH ISONIAZID ON EXPERIMENTAL MURINE LEPROSY IN MICEBritish Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy, 1956