First Author | Sundberg JP | Year | 1994 |
Journal | Gastroenterology | Volume | 107 |
Issue | 6 | Pages | 1726-35 |
PubMed ID | 7958684 | Mgi Jnum | J:22049 |
Mgi Id | MGI:69941 | Doi | 10.1016/0016-5085(94)90813-3 |
Citation | Sundberg JP, et al. (1994) Spontaneous, heritable colitis in a new substrain of C3H/HeJ mice. Gastroenterology 107(6):1726-35 |
abstractText | BACKGROUND/AIMS: C3H/HeJ mice at the Jackson Laboratory have periodically been culled because of the occurrence of soft feces, perianal ulceration, and right-sided colitis. No pathogens have been isolated. The goal of the current study was to establish a substrain with a high incidence of this disease. METHODS: Affected male and female C3H/HeJ mice were bred. The clinical, pathological, microbiological, and genetic features of 216 mice of the resulting pedigree were characterized. RESULTS: A severely affected female crossed with a normal male resulted in a new substrain, denoted C3H/HeJBir, with a high incidence of right-sided colitis. Histologically, lesions occurred primarily in the cecum and proximal colon, characterized by acute and chronic inflammation, crypt abscesses, ulcerations, regenerative hyperplasia, and submucosal scarring. Such colitis peaked at 3-6 weeks; however, similar disease was found sporadically in animals more than 1 year of age. Small lesions at the anorectal junction were common throughout life. An extensive search for pathogens was negative. Genetic analysis of C3H/HeJBir mice suggested that the disease was inherited as a quantitative trait. CONCLUSIONS: C3H/HeJBir mice develop a spontaneous, heritable form of idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease and will be a valuable resource for genetic and immunologic studies of this disease. |