Changes in duodenal CD163-positive cells in dogs with chronic enteropathy after successful treatment

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Abstract

Chronic enteropathy (CE) in dogs is characterized retrospectively per treatment response as food-responsive enteropathy (FRE), antibiotic-responsive enteropathy (ARE), and immunosuppressant-responsive enteropathy (IRE) – the latter most resembling inflammatory bowel disease in people. The aim of this study was to characterize duodenal macrophages (Mϕ) in CE using immunohistochemistry; with calprotectin (CAL) as a marker of early differentiated Mϕ and CD163 expression as a marker for resident Mϕ in the duodenum before and after treatment. Prior to treatment, dogs with FRE and IRE had a lower CD163+/CAL+ ratio than control dogs (CTRL) in crypts; this increased significantly and normalized compared with CTRL after treatment. Conversely, the CD163+/CAL+ ratio in dogs with ARE was comparable to that in healthy dogs before and after treatment. In summary, these results suggest that Mϕ play a role in the pathogenesis of CE in FRE and IRE, with a decrease in resident Mϕ and an increase in early differentiated Mϕ, but not in ARE dogs. Mϕ normalize after successful treatment.

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Dandrieux, J. R. S., Martinez Lopez, L. M., Stent, A., Jergens, A., Allenspach, K., Nowell, C. J., … Mansfield, C. S. (2018). Changes in duodenal CD163-positive cells in dogs with chronic enteropathy after successful treatment. Innate Immunity, 24(7), 400–410. https://doi.org/10.1177/1753425918799865

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