Abstract

Leptospirosis is a zoonosis found worldwide that is caused by a spirochete. The main reservoirs of Leptospira, which presents an asymptomatic infection, are wild rodents, including the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus). Experimental studies of the mechanisms of its renal colonization in rats have previously used an intraperitoneal inoculation route. However, knowledge of rat-rat transmission requires the use of a natural route of inoculation, such as a mucosal or subcutaneous route. We investigated for the first time the effects of subcutaneous and mucosal inoculation routes compared to the reference intraperitoneal route during Leptospira infection in adult rats. Infection characteristics were studied using Leptospira renal isolation, serology, and molecular and histological analyses. Leptospira infection was asymptomatic using each inoculation route, and caused similar antibody production regardless of renal colonization. The observed renal colonization rates were 8 out of 8 rats, 5 out of 8 rats and 1 out of 8 rats for the intraperitoneal, mucosal and subcutaneous inoculation routes, respectively. Thus, among the natural infection routes studied, mucosal inoculation was more efficient for renal colonization associated with urinary excretion than the subcutaneous route and induced a slower-progressing infection than the intraperitoneal route. These results can facilitate understanding of the infection modalities in rats, unlike the epidemiological studies conducted in wild rats. Future studies of other natural inoculation routes in rat models will increase our knowledge of rat-rat disease transmission and allow the investigation of infection kinetics.

Highlights

  • Leptospirosis is a worldwide zoonosis that is caused by a spirochete of the genus Leptospira [1]

  • We report the effect of the inoculation route on Leptospira asymptomatic infection in a rat model and the results of investigations of other potential leptospire excretion routes

  • Natural routes of infection, such as mucosal and subcutaneous routes, affected both the time course of Leptospira dissemination in the body and the renal colonization associated with urinary excretion

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Summary

Introduction

Leptospirosis is a worldwide zoonosis that is caused by a spirochete of the genus Leptospira [1]. The main reservoirs of Leptospira are wild rodents, including the brown rat (Rattus norvegicus) [1,8]. The infection is asymptomatic in this animal, and leptospires persist by renal carriage, colonizing the proximal tubules [9]. Leptospires are secreted in the rat’s urine and infect humans and other animals by direct or indirect contact with the contaminated environment [5,10]. Rattus species appear to have a specific association with the Icterohaemorrhagiae serogroup [4,11] that causes most human cases of leptospirosis worldwide [2,11]. The control of the contamination of humans and domestic animals is required in a rodent infection study

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