Collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) is an animal model for rheumatoid arthritis. The disease is elicited by immunization of genetically susceptible DBA/1 mice with type II collagen, resulting in a debilitating arthritis characterized by inflammation and involvement of multiple joints. We investigated the role of endogenous interleukin (IL)-12 in the pathogenesis of this disease by undertaking an analysis of IL-12-deficient mice on the DBA/1 genetic background after immunization with type II collagen. Both the incidence and severity of disease were significantly reduced in mice unable to produce biologically active IL-12. Concomitant decreases were observed in serum levels of pathogenic, collagen-specific IgG2a antibodies and collagen-induced secretion of interferon-gamma by immune splenocytes in vitro, consistent with an impaired T helper-1 response. There were, however, a few animals which developed severe disease in a single paw in spite of this highly diminished Th1 response. Taken together, these results demonstrate an important role for IL-12 in the pathogenesis of CIA, although it is not absolutely required for disease development.
The accidental release of methyl isocyanate (MIC) in Bhopal, India, was reportedly responsible for the deaths of more than 2,000 people. To study the pathology of acute inhalation exposure to MIC, the tissues of male and female Fischer 344 rats were evaluated immediately after a single 2-hr exposure to 0, 3, 10, or 30 ppm MIC, and through day 91. Early gross pathologic changes in the 30 ppm-exposed rats included a reddish white encrustation around the mouth and nose, a small thymus, and distension of the gastrointestinal tract with gas. Lungs (middle and median lobes) showed consolidation and hemorrhage and failed to deflate when the chest cavity was opened. Microscopic changes in the upper respiratory tract 3 hr after exposure included marked erosion and separation of olfactory and respiratory epithelia from the basement membrane with accumulation of serofibrinous fluid. On day 1, acute inflammation and fibrinopurulent exudate partially blocked the nasal passages. Epithelial cells had sloughed from the nasopharynx, trachea, bronchi, and major bronchioles, leaving the basement membrane covered with fibrin and exudate. Granulomatous inflammation and intraluminal fibrosis of the airways were observed by day 3, with increased intraluminal fibrosis by day 7. Lower airways became blocked by exfoliated cells, mucous plugs, and/or intraluminal fibrosis. Damage to the lung parenchyma, even at lethal concentrations, was limited to moderate inflammation. Intraluminal fibrosis, mild bronchitis and bronchiolitis, and mucous plugs persisted throughout the 91-day study. These changes could account for evidence of obstructive lung disease detected in pulmonary function studies in companion studies. Evidence of direct injury to nonrespiratory tissues was not found; pulmonary injury and associated respiratory obstruction appeared sufficient to cause both early and delayed deaths.
Abstract. Seventeen paragangliomas were identified in a retrospective review of 200 NTP/NCI carcinogenicity studies in F344/N rats that served either as control or treated animals. Most tumors were grossly visible and located in the retroperitoneum adjacent to the vertebrae and aorta near the kidneys. Three microscopically detected paragangliomas were found at the base of the heart. Microscopically, neoplastic cells were in nests separated by reticulin fibers and capillaries. Argyrophil granules were in the cytoplasm of the retroperitoneal and mediastinal paravertebral tumors. Dense granules were found in the one tumor examined ultrastructurally. Some tumors had areas of necrosis and tumor emboli were present in the lumen of the abdominal aorta and vena cava adjacent to the tumor with metastases present in pulmonary vessels. The incidence of retroperitoneal neoplasms was 3 times more frequent in male than in female F344/N rats.
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