Data on spontaneous pathology are substantially scarce for common marmosets, compared to other laboratory animals, but is essential for the interpretation of histological findings in the context of toxicological and experimental studies. Especially if common marmosets are used as experimental animals in respiratory research, detailed knowledge on the spectrum, occurrence, and incidence of spontaneous histopathological pulmonary lesions in this non-human primate species is required. In this study, lung tissue of 638 common marmosets from the marmoset colony of the German Primate Center was examined histologically. The analysis revealed a high incidence of predominantly mild and multifocal interstitial pneumonia (32.99ĝ€%) of unknown etiology in most cases. Only few marmosets exhibited lobar pneumonia (1.41ĝ€%) and bronchopneumonia (0.94), which were mainly caused by bacterial pathogens such as Bordetella bronchiseptica and Klebsiella pneumoniae. Lung immaturity and atelectasis were common histological findings in newborn marmosets. Typical background lesions included anthracosis (8.15ĝ€%), hemosiderosis (1.72ĝ€%), extramedullary hematopoiesis (11.6ĝ€%), mineralization (10.97ĝ€%), and inflammatory cell foci (10.34ĝ€%). In addition, three cases of pulmonary arteriopathy (0.47ĝ€%) and 1 case of foreign-body granuloma (0.16ĝ€%) were detected in the marmoset study cohort. The high prevalence of circulatory disturbances (congestion, edema, hemorrhage) and changes in air content (secondary atelectasis, alveolar emphysema) could partly be explained by euthanasia-related artifacts or agonal changes. The present study provides a comprehensive overview of the range and incidence of spontaneous pulmonary histopathology in common marmosets, serving as valuable reference data for the interpretation of lung lesions in toxicological and experimental marmoset studies.
CITATION STYLE
Bleyer, M., Kunze, M., Gruber-Dujardin, E., & Mätz-Rensing, K. (2017). Spontaneous lung pathology in a captive common marmoset colony (Callithrix jacchus). Primate Biology, 4(1), 17–25. https://doi.org/10.5194/pb-4-17-2017
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