4.4 Article

Chlamydia pecorum-Induced Arthritis in Experimentally and Naturally Infected Sheep

期刊

VETERINARY PATHOLOGY
卷 58, 期 2, 页码 346-360

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0300985820973461

关键词

Chlamydia pecorum; arthritis; lambs; histopathology; immunohistochemistry; immune cells; joints; kidney; pathogenesis; sheep

资金

  1. Meat and Livestock Australia
  2. Australian Wool Innovation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Chlamydia pecorum is an intracellular pathogen that can infect a wide range of animals, causing arthritis and pyelitis. Histopathology and immunohistochemistry assessments on tissues from sheep experimentally or naturally infected with C. pecorum revealed inflammatory lesions in synovial tissues and renal pelvis, indicating hematogeneous spread of the pathogen leading to arthritis in lambs.
Chlamydia pecorum is an obligate intracellular pathogen with a wide host range including livestock such as sheep, cattle, goats, and pigs as well as wildlife species such as koalas. Chlamydial polyarthritis is an economically important disease resulting in swollen joints, lameness, stiffness, and weight loss in young sheep. In the present study, tissues from sheep experimentally or naturally infected with Chlamydia pecorum were assessed by histopathology and immunohistochemistry. Carpal, hock, and stifle joints as well as spleen, liver, kidney, lymph nodes, lung, and brain of 35 sheep from different inoculation groups were available. Two different C. pecorum strains (IPA and E58), different routes of administration (intraarticular or intravenous), UVA-irradiated IPA strain, and corresponding noninfected control groups were investigated. Similar investigations on tissues from 5 naturally infected sheep were performed. The most obvious inflammatory lesions were observed in synovial tissues and, notably, in the renal pelvis from the experimentally infected group and naturally infected animals. This resulted in chronic or chronic-active arthritis and pyelitis. Intralesional chlamydial inclusions could be demonstrated by immunohistochemistry in both tissues. Immunohistochemical evaluation of the presence and distribution of macrophages, T and B cells in synovial tissues revealed macrophages as the most prevalent inflammatory cell population. Previous observations indicated that C. pecorum isolates can infect circulating monocytes. Together with the finding of the histological lesions in synovial tissues and internal organs alongside the presence of C. pecorum DNA, these observations suggest chlamydial arthritis in lambs is the result of hematogeneous spread of C. pecorum.

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