AN ANIMAL-MODEL OF TRACHOMA .2. THE IMPORTANCE OF REPEATED REINFECTION

  • 1 January 1982
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 23 (4), 507-515
Abstract
An animal model of chronic cicatrizing trachoma was produced by repeated ocular inoculation with Chlamydia trachomatis serotype E, a genitally transmitted strain. A chronic follicular conjunctivitis was produced in cynomolgus monkeys by repeated inoculation with C. trachomatis serotype A, which had been isolated from an area of endemic trachoma. This disease was similar in all respects to that which followed infection with the serotype E strain. Cynomolgus monkeys inoculated with a single dose of serotype E of C. trachomatis strain developed an acute, self-limited follicular conjunctivitis, which was intense for 4 wk and then slowly subsided. The organism could be reisolated only during the first 4 wk after inoculation. On reinoculation at 15 and 30 wk after the initial infection, these animals demonstrated only a mild and transitory clinical response, and the agent could be recovered for only up to 14 days after inoculation. Repeated weekly reinoculation with either serotype led to a chronic progressive clinical response in these animals, although after the first 6 wk the agent was isolated only occasionally. This chronic disease was shown not to be due to hypersensitivity to the egg yolk components in which the organism was grown. Evidently, the serotype of the chlamydial organism may not be as important in determining the clinical course of disease as is the frequency or persistence of exposure to the chlamydial agent. Although a single inoculum produces an acute follicular conjunctivitis, repeated inoculation is needed to produce the chronic disease characteristic of trachoma in this animal model.