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Publication : Strain-dependent differences in host response to Candida albicans infection in mice are related to organ susceptibility and infectious load.

First Author  Ashman RB Year  1996
Journal  Infect Immun Volume  64
Issue  5 Pages  1866-9
PubMed ID  8613406 Mgi Jnum  J:34131
Mgi Id  MGI:81603 Doi  10.1128/iai.64.5.1866-1869.1996
Citation  Ashman RB, et al. (1996) Strain-dependent differences in host response to Candida albicans infection in mice are related to organ susceptibility and infectious load. Infect Immun 64(5):1866-9
abstractText  After systemic infection with the yeast Candida albicans, inbred mice show substantial differences in mortality, organ colonization, and severity of tissue damage. To examine the relationships between these variables, which are not directly correlated with each other, fungal colonization of the kidneys and brain was enumerated in six inbred strains that exhibit different patterns of tissue damage and mortality. Mice lacking the fifth component of complement (C5) are highly susceptible to lethal challenge, and A/J and DBA/2 mice, both C5 deficient, showed the highest colony counts in the kidneys after challenge with 10(5) blastoconidia. In contrast, colony counts in the brain of all six strains were equivalent at this challenge dose. A/J and DBA/2 mice died after challenge with 3 x 10(5) blastoconidia, but other strains showed an increase in kidney colonization, and strain-dependent differences in clearance from the brain became evident. The data suggest that mortality in A/J and DBA/2 mice is related to an unusual susceptibility of the kidneys to colonization by C. albicans and that there may be tissue-specific differences in host protective mechanisms.
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