Abstract

Neonates and young C3H/HeJ mice were highly susceptible to lethal infection with Leptospira interrogans serovar icterohaemorrhagiae. The main pathological changes were seen by light microscopy in the lung and kidneys of 3-week-old mice at 11 days after inoculation. Lung histological lesions included small and medium-sized vasculitis with fibrinoid changes, hemorrhages, moderate infiltrate of mononuclear inflammatory cells and fibrin thrombi. In the kidney there was mild to severe acute tubular necrosis associated with interstitial nephritis. Repair of damaged tubules in surviving mice was observed within 17 days after inoculation. Pathological findings of CD4+ and CD8+ cell-depleted mice were clearly more severe than that seen in untreated animals by 17 days after inoculation. Comparatively, CD4+/CD8+ cell-depleted mice had more marked lung and kidney lesions than in the CD8+ or CD4+ cell-depleted mice. A very high level of tubular alterations was seen in the kidneys of all treated groups. Increased degrees of interstitial nephritis also reflected the T-cell subsets depletion related events. Leptospires were clearly demonstrated by immunoperoxidase close to the sites of histological damage in all infected mice. C3H/HeJ mice represent a useful model for further studies in pathogenicity of leptospires and natural resistance of the host.

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