Affiliation:
1. Department of Bacteriology and Botany, Biological Research Laboratories, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York
Abstract
Balish, Edward
(Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y.),
and A. W. Phillips
. Growth, morphogenesis, and virulence of
Candida albicans
after oral inoculation in the germ-free and conventional chick. J. Bacteriol.
91:
1736–1743. 1966.—The effects of intestinal bacteria on the multiplication, morphogenesis, and infectivity of
Candida albicans
in the alimentary tract were investigated by comparing results obtained in germ-free and conventional chicks after oral inoculation. This challenge resulted in the establishment of large numbers of the pathogen in the alimentary tract of each group of chicks; these numbers were increased in crop contents from challenged bacteria-free chicks wherein hyphae predominated over the yeast form. These animals also had lesions of the crop epithelium containing numerous hyphae and few yeast-like forms. In contrast, challenged conventional chicks receiving an adequate diet displayed no evidence of infection. Their alimentary tract contained the yeast form of
C. albicans
; no hyphae were seen. Although we found bacterial inhibition of
C. albicans
multiplication in the alimentary tract, this in itself did not seem to explain the resistance to intestinal candidiasis in our conventional chicks. We argued that this resistance to infection was due chiefly to the prevention of hyphal development in
C. albicans
by intestinal bacteria.
C. albicans
in the gut of our conventional chicks resulted in some increase in numbers of enterococci in contents from the crop. Increased
p
H values in contents from the gut of germ-free chicks were not clearly related to infection after challenge. The
E
h
of the above crop contents were only slightly decreased in the germ-free crop. Thus the
E
h
did not appear to be involved in susceptibility to infection. Invasion of the blood stream and kidneys of conventional chicks by the yeast form of
C. albicans
occurred in challenged animals receiving a purified diet which had been radiation-sterilized and stored for 6 months at room temperature (25 C). Their growth rate decreased and they became moribund; no hyphae were observed in tissues or intestine of these animals. Challenged bacteria-free chicks receiving the same diet were resistant to the above invasion, although they had crop lesions containing hyphae as described. The resistance of these chicks to systemic invasion was attributed to absence of intestinal bacteria competing for low levels of vitamins in the stored diet. Germ-free chicks had decreased levels of serum γ-globulin which increased after challenge, whereas this value was unchanged in conventional birds after challenge.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
39 articles.
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