Abstract

Separate suspensions of two strains of ileal symbiont ( IS) intracellularis, an obligate intracellular bacterium and the causative agent of porcine proliferative enteropathy, were added to 40 or 80 per cent confluent monolayers of established cultures of rat (IEC-18) or pig enterocytes (IPEC-J2). Peak numbers of intracellular organisms were detected within the enterocytes six days later, but no cytopathic effects were evident. After an initial close association with the cell membrane of the enterocytes, single bacteria were internalised after three hours within membranes-bound vacuoles. The formation of an electron-dense projection between cell membranes and external bacteria was only evident if the bacterial suspensions were centrifuged on to the monolayers. The release of internalised bacteria into the cytoplasm, with the breakdown and loss of membrane-bound vacuoles, was also evident three hours after infection. Internalised bacteria were associated with, but not observed within, coated membrane pits. Mitochondria were closely associated with internalised vacuoles and with released bacteria. Two to six days after infection, multiplication of the bacteria free in the cytoplasm was frequently observed. In infected cells six days after the inoculation of monolayers, groups of bacteria were found within large, balloon-like, cytoplasmic protrusions, and the subsequent release of bacteria from the monolayer provided a means of bacterial exit from the cells. Many events in the in vitro culture model closely resembled events observed at the cellular level in animals infected with is intracellularis and the model provides a useful basis for investigating the pathogenetic mechanisms of this bacterium.

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