Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2428128 Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases 2016 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Oral infection of goats with MAH resulted in granulomas in oGALT and lymph nodes.•Morphologically distinct granulomas were found in sick and healthy goats.•Granulomas reflected the heterogeneity of lesions seen in human and ruminant TB.•Organized granulomas were surrounded by tertiary lymphoid tissue.•Experimental infection of goats with MAH is a valuable model for TB research.

Oral infection of goats with Mycobacterium avium subsp. hominissuis (MAH) resulted in a large variety of granulomas in organized gut-associated lymphatic tissues and intestinal lymph nodes. To characterize the cellular composition of granulomas, CD4+, CD8+, γδ, B lymphocytes and plasma, CD25+, CD68+, MHC-II+, Ki67+ and endothelial cells were labeled in consecutive frozen sections by immunohistochemistry and acid fast bacilli (AFB) by Kinyoun stain. Granulomas with extensive necrosis, little mineralization and variable numbers of AFB surrounded by many CD4+ T cells, but only few epitheloid macrophages were observed in severely sick goats at 2–3 mpi. They were interpreted as exuberant immune reaction. Organized granulomas with very few AFB were seen in clinically healthy goats at 13 mpi. The necrotic cores were surrounded by a zone of granulomatous infiltrate with many epitheloid macrophages and few lymphocytes. This zone was initially wide and highly vascularized and became progressively smaller. It was enclosed by an increasing layer of connective tissue. All organized granulomas were surrounded by compartimentalized tertiary lymphoid tissue. The granulomas in experimental infection of goats with MAH reflect the heterogeneity of lesions seen in mycobacterial infections of humans and ruminants and are therefore valuable for comparative research.

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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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