Lung bacterial clearance in murine pneumococcal pneumonia

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Abstract

The bactericidal capacity of the rat lung was studied during the development of pneumococcal pneumonia. Pneumonia was produced in a lower lobe by the intrabronchial instillation of 104 Streptococcus pneumoniae cells in buffer. Lung bacterial counts progressively increased, reaching 107 per lung within 48 h, and the increase was associated with localized atelectasis and consolidation. Bacterial multiplication was inhibited with tetracycline at various intervals after infection, and the subsequent clearance of pneumococci was determined. Viable pneumococci were rapidly killed by lung defenses if bacterial multiplication was inhibited within 12 h of the onset of infection. No change occurred in the bacterial population if tetracylcine was delayed until 24 h after infection, indicating that pneumococcal killing by lung defenses had ceased. This effect could be reproduced with the addition of pneumococcal capsular polysaccharide to the inoculum, which produced a dose-related inhibition of pneumococcal clearance. The clearance of S. epidermidis was not impaired in the presence of pneumococcal pneumonia or by administration of exogenous capsular polysaccharide. These data indicate that pneumococcal pneumonia causes a marked impairment in lung antipneumococcal defenses within 24 h of the onset of infection. This acquired defect in antibacterial defenses may be due to the accumulation of pneumococcal capsular material in the lungs of infected animals.

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Ansfield, M. J., Woods, D. E., & Johanson, W. G. (1977). Lung bacterial clearance in murine pneumococcal pneumonia. Infection and Immunity, 17(1), 195–204. https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.17.1.195-204.1977

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