Wj. Hopkins et al., LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE-RESPONDER AND NONRESPONDER C3H MOUSE STRAINS ARE EQUALLY SUSCEPTIBLE TO AN INDUCED ESCHERICHIA-COLI URINARY-TRACT INFECTION, Infection and immunity, 64(4), 1996, pp. 1369-1372
Host defense against bacterial urinary tract infections (UTI) includes
both inflammatory and immune responses to infecting bacteria, The cel
lular events leading up to local inflammation are thought to be under
genetic control and initiated by lipopolysaccharides (LPS) of gram-neg
ative bacteria such as Escherichia coli, It has been previously report
ed that mice which lack functional Lps genes are more susceptible to i
nduced E. coli UTI than mice with normal mitogenic responses to LPS. I
n contrast to these findings, data in this report demonstrate that LPS
-responder and nonresponder C3H mouse strains are equally susceptible
to E. coli UTI, When C3H/OuJ (Lps(n)/Lps(n)) and C3H/HeJ (Lps(d)/Lps(d
)) were intravesically inoculated with equal numbers of uropathogenic
E. coli organisms, neither strain was able to effectively resolve the
induced UTI, The inability of C3H/OuJ mice to combat the infection was
not due to an impaired response to LPS, nor could a defect in the loc
al inflammatory response be identified, The results indicate that fact
ors other than LPS responsiveness are also important in determining ho
st resistance to UTI.