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Studies on organ specificity in experimental murine cryptococcosis

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Abstract

The chief histopathological features found in patients with cryptococcosis are both a cystic (gelatinous) lesion and a granulomatous reaction. These two tissue reactions are definitely different from each other, because a cyst is not accompanied with a significant cellular response, while a granuloma is formed as a result of various cell reactions. Therefore, it is very interesting that these two types of lesion can be observed in the same patient or in the same animal infected with Cryptococcus neoformans. From our previous paper (II) the authors reach such a thought that two steps may be required for the granuloma formation against C. neoformans infection: first, of phagocytosis by sessile macrophages of C. neoformans and second is related to T-cell function. This experiment was done to verify that the granulomatous response against C. neoformans infection might occur easily in the organs rich in sessile macrophages as compared with those poor in them and a polysaccharide capsule surrounding cryptococci may have effects to inhibit a migration of polymorphonuclear leucocytes or monocytes toward C. neoformans. C. neoformans strain RIB 12 (serological type A, mating type α) was used in this experiment. After a culture of a brain heart infusion glucose agar slant at 37 C for 3 days, yeast cells of the strain were harvested, and suspended in 1/15 M(pH7.4) sterile phosphate buffered saline solution. Infective inoculum was prepared by adjusting the number of the yeast cells to 105, 106 or 5×106/0.2 ml in a hemacytometer. Fourty-two male mice strain ddY were divided into 3 groups consisting of 14 each and one group was allotted to one of the cell suspensions. Each mouse was inoculated with 0.2 ml of the cell suspension into a tail vein and one mouse from each group was sacrificed at adequate intervals. At necropsies the brain, thymus, lungs, heart, liver, kidneys, spleen, pancreas, mesenteric lymph nodes, a part of the small intestine, testes and fat tissue were removed. From these organs histopathological sections, stained with HE or by PAS, were prepared. To investigate effects of a polysaccharide capsule to a migration of polymorphonuclear leucocytes or monocytes, double infections with C. neoformans and Aspergillus fumigatus, and an observation by the ‘Agar-Implantation method’ were done.

As results, granulomata were formed easily in the organs rich in macrophages or lymphocytes such as the liver, spleen, lymph nodes, thymus, lungs, small intestine and fat tissue. On the contrary, in organs poor in the macrophages such as the brain, heart, pancreas, kidneys, adrenal glands and testes, the chief histopathological feature was a cyst formation containing numerous yeast cells. In the double infection, two types of lesions such as cysts and abscesses were observed in the sections of the brain. The former occurred against C. neoformans infection and the latter, against A. fumigatus infection. Even though a cyst was very close to an abscess, polymorphonuclear leucocytes or monocytes were never induced to C. neoformans. In the observation using the ‘Agar-Implantation method’, a severe cellular infiltration occurred to a perfect (teleomorphic) state of C. neoformans and very weak response, to yeast cells with a polysaccharide capsule. The difference may be due to the existence of the capsule, because a perfect state of C. neoformans is not surrounded by it.

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Miyaji, M., Nishimura, K. Studies on organ specificity in experimental murine cryptococcosis. Mycopathologia 76, 145–154 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00437195

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