Author:
Peters Jay I,Maselli Diego Jose,Mangat Mandeep,Coalson Jacqueline J.,Hinojosa Ceci,Giavedoni Luis,Brown-Elliott Barbara A.,Chan Edward D.,Griffith David E.
Abstract
AbstractRationaleMycobacterium avium complex, is the most common nontuberculous mycobacterial respiratory pathogen in humans. Disease mechanisms are poorly understood due to the absence of a reliable animal model for M. avium complex pulmonary disease.ObjectiveAssess the susceptibility, immunologic and histopathologic responses of the common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) to M. avium complex pulmonary infection.Methods7 adult female marmosets underwent endobronchial inoculation with 108 colony-forming units of M. intracellulare and were monitored for 30 or 60 days. Prior to infection, chest radiograph and serum cytokines were assessed; serum cytokines were also monitored weekly for 30 days. At sacrifice 30 days (3 animals) or 60 days (4 animals) after infection, chest radiograph, serum and bronchoalveolar lavage cytokines, histopathology, and cultures of the bronchoalveolar lavage, lungs, liver, and kidney were analyzed.Measurements and Main ResultsFive of seven animals (two at 30 days and three at 60 days of infection) had positive lung cultures for M. intracellulare. Extra-pulmonary cultures were positive in three animals. All animals appeared healthy throughout the study. All five animals with positive lung cultures had radiographic changes consistent with pneumonitis. At 30 days, those with M. intracellulare lung infection showed granulomatous inflammation while at 60 days there was less inflammatory change, but bronchiectasis was noted. The cytokine response in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was uniformly greater in the animals with positive M. intracellulare cultures than those without a productive infection with greater levels at 30-days compared to 60-days. Similarly, serum cytokines were more elevated in the animals that had positive M. intracellulare cultures compared to those without a productive infection, peaking 14-21 days after inoculation.ConclusionEndobronchial instillation of M. intracellulare resulted in pulmonary mycobacterial infection in marmosets with a differential immune response, radiographic and histopathologic abnormalities, and an indolent course consistent with M. avium complex lung infection in humans.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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