Susceptibility to adjuvant-induced arthritis among germfree, specific-pathogen-free, and conventional rats

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Abstract

Germfree F344 rats developed severe arthritis with 100% incidence after a single intradermal injection of either squalane containing 0.5 mg of heat-killed Mycobacterium bovis BCG or a water-in-oil emulsion containing 0.2 mg of peptidoglycan derived from Staphylococcus epidermidis. Conventional F344 rats developed less-severe arthritis with 20% incidence for heat-killed BCG and 0% incidence for peptidoglycan. Specific-pathogen-free rats showed an intermediate susceptibility between germfree and conventional rats. Interestingly, both immunized specific-pathogen-free and conventional rats, but not immunized germfree rats, showed weak delayed-type hypersensitivity reactions to peptidoglycans derived from either S. epidermidis or Lactobacillus plantarum, suggesting that a bacterial flora may furnish a stimulus for induction of cell-mediated immunity to ubiquitous bacterial peptidoglycans. It is thus possible that although a bacterial flora is not necessary for development of adjuvant arthritis, it may have some suppressive effect on the development of the disease in specific-pathogen-free and conventional F344 rats, possibly through modulation of the immune response.

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Kohashi, O., Kuwata, J., Umehara, K., Uemura, F., Takahashi, T., & Ozawa, A. (1979). Susceptibility to adjuvant-induced arthritis among germfree, specific-pathogen-free, and conventional rats. Infection and Immunity, 26(3), 791–794. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.26.3.791-794.1979

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