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Publication : Infectious agents are not necessary for murine atherogenesis.

First Author  Wright SD Year  2000
Journal  J Exp Med Volume  191
Issue  8 Pages  1437-42
PubMed ID  10770809 Mgi Jnum  J:61722
Mgi Id  MGI:1355463 Doi  10.1084/jem.191.8.1437
Citation  Wright SD, et al. (2000) Infectious agents are not necessary for murine atherogenesis. J Exp Med 191(8):1437-42
abstractText  Recent work has revealed correlations between bacterial or viral infections and atherosclerotic disease. One particular bacterium, Chlamydia pneumoniae, has been observed at high frequency in human atherosclerotic lesions, prompting the hypothesis that infectious agents may be necessary for the initiation or progression of atherosclerosis. To determine if responses to gram-negative bacteria are necessary for atherogenesis, we first bred atherosclerosis-prone apolipoprotein (apo) E(-/)- (deficient) mice with animals incapable of responding to bacterial lipopolysaccharide. Atherogenesis was unaffected in doubly deficient animals. We further tested the role of infectious agents by creating a colony of germ-free apo E(-/)- mice. These animals are free of all microbial agents (bacterial, viral, and fungal). Atherosclerosis in germ-free animals was not measurably different from that in animals raised with ambient levels of microbial challenge. These studies show that infection is not necessary for murine atherosclerosis and that, unlike peptic ulcer, Koch's postulates cannot be fulfilled for any infectious agent in atherosclerosis.
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