JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
Cytological changes related to Brucella canis variants uptake in vitro
Eveland, Warren C.; Egwu, Igbo N.
1979-05
Citation:Egwu, Igbo N.; Eveland, Warren C.; (1979). "Cytological changes related to Brucella canis variants uptake in vitro." Medical Microbiology and Immunology 167 (2): 107-115. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/47529>
Abstract: In this study, evidence for in vitro uptake, invasion, and cytopathogonomic effects of normal and variant strains of B. canis on tissue culture, is presented. B. canis L-phase were penicillin-induced and these microorganisms produced revertants on penicillin-free media. Tissue culture (LLC-MK 2 ) cells were divided into different normal and variant-infected groups (I–IV), including controls. Bright-field and electron microscopic observations indicated uptake of all the strains and recognizable host cell damage (CPE) to varying degrees. At 72 h after infection, the extent of damage by L-phase was the least (55.5% CPE). The L-phase-derived revertants resulted in 80% damage; this approximates the adverse effect of normal B. canis (85%). In addition to these gross changes, various structural abnormalities, including pyknosis, nuclear disorganization, vacuolation, and karyorrhexis, were apparent. The implications of these findings and the indirect role of the L-phase in brucellosis due to B. canis are discussed.