Groups of mice from genetically defined inbred strains were infected genitally with a pathogenic human strain of Chlamydia trachomatis and their subsequent fertility was compared. The CBA, C3H (H-2(o)) and C3H/He-mg (H-2(k)) mice were less fertile than control mice, at least up to 6 months after infection. In contrast, fertility was not impaired in BALB/c mice or in congenic BALB/K mice, which had the H-2(k) haplotype. Reduced fertility was paralleled by the extent of histological oviductal inflammation in mice of each strain. No salpingitis was seen 21 days after infection in the BALB strains, but lesions were apparent in CBA and C3H strains up to about 70 days after inoculation and these sometimes developed into hydrosalpinges. These results indicate that susceptibility to chlamydial salpingitis and subsequent infertility is under genetic control. This control was not simply associated with the major H-2 gene complex, as mouse strains of the same haplotype (H-2(k)) differed in susceptibility. The fertility of BALB/c (H-2(d)) and BALB/K (H-2(k)) strains was no different from that of controls, and congenic C3H mice of differing H-2 haplotypes (H-2(k) and H-2(o)) showed reduced fertility. Although all the infected F1 (BALB/K x C3H/He-mg) mice produced litters at the same rate as untreated controls, the litters were considerably smaller. This was due to the occurrence of unilateral pregnancies in the mice inoculated under the ovarian bursae and possibly also to early fetal death in mice inoculated directly in the uterus. These findings emphasize the importance of early diagnosis and treatment of infection of the lower genital tract of women.
CITATION STYLE
Tuffrey, M., Alexander, F., Woods, C., & Taylor-Robinson, D. (1992). Genetic susceptibility to chlamydial salpingitis and subsequent infertility in mice. Journal of Reproduction and Fertility, 95(1), 31–38. https://doi.org/10.1530/jrf.0.0950031
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