Abstract

To determine possible pathogenesis of Vibrio parahaemolyticus-host-organ system interactions, studies of invasiveness were made by a direct fluorescent-antibody method. Broth cultures of live cells isolated from seafish or symptomatic humans were inoculated separately into ligated ileal loops of young New Zealand white rabbits. After suitable incubation, rabbits were sacrificed, and ileal loops and tissue specimens were aseptically removed. Ileal loops were prepared and stained with specific fluorescein-tagged antibody, and organ specimens were cultured for isolation of the inoculated Vibrio strain. All strains tested penetrated into the lamina propria of the ileum and were isolated from the cultured tissue specimens, indicating that the organism is capable of more than a superficial colonization of the gut. The presence of Vibrio in cultured tissue specimens suggests invasion of deeper tissue by either the lymphatic or the circulatory system.

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