It has been difficult to produce persistent colonization by Candida albicans in the gastrointestinal tract of adult mice without the use of antibiotics and immunosuppressants. We hypothesized that diet influences the colonization of C. albicans and tested the hypothesis. BALB/c mice fed either a commercial rodent diet or a nutritionally adequate mixture of purified ingredients were inoculated i.g. with C. albicans (5 x 10(7) cells). Gastrointestinal colonization was examined by fecal culture, tissue culture, and histology. Mice fed the purified diet had a high fecal recovery of C. albicans [5-6log(10) colony forming units (cfu)/g feces] throughout the experimental period (6 wk), and the major site of colonization was the stomach. C. albicans was undetectable in the feces of mice fed the commercial diet 2 wk after inoculation. Immunosuppressants induced systemic dissemination of C. albicans in mice fed the purified diet. The number of lactobacilli and the concentration of organic acids in the stomach were significantly lower in mice fed the purified diet than in those fed the commercial diet. In vitro culture experiments revealed that acetic and lactic acids suppressed the growth of C. albicans. These results suggest that a reduction in lactobacilli in the stomach of mice fed the purified diet contributed to sustained gastric candidiasis. We therefore propose a novel model of sustained gastric candidiasis by a single i.g. inoculation of C. albicans in healthy adult mice fed a purified diet.
In an attempt to clarify the role of macrophages and their mediators during regeneration of the liver, the difference of liver regeneration among C3H/HeN (LPS-responsive strain) and C3H/HeJ (LPS-resistant strain) mice was investigated. After a 67% partial hepatectomy, an increase in the weight of regenerating liver was significantly delayed in the C3H/HeJ mice, as compared with C3H/HeN mice. The number of hepatocytes labeled with antibody against PCNA reached maximum levels 48 hr after partial hepatectomy, but the PCNA labeling index in C3H/HeJ mice was 20% less than that for C3H/HeN mice. In addition, TNF-alpha activities in serum were enhanced shortly after partial hepatectomy in C3H/HeN strain mice, but were not increased in C3H/HeJ strain mice. Serum IL-6 levels were markedly enhanced in both C3H/HeN and C3H/HeJ mice, but a bimodial peak (14 and 48 hr after partial hepatectomy) was demonstrated in C3H/HeN mice, in contrast to a single peak (at 24 hr) in C3H/HeJ mice. Suppression of Kupffer cells by previous administration of gadolinium chloride in C3H/HeN mice reduced the increase in both serum TNF-alpha and IL-6 concentrations, reduced PCNA labeling index of hepatocytes by 20%, and disturbed the regeneration of the liver. Previous administration of antibody against TNF-alpha reduced the PCNA labeling index of hepatocytes by 20% after partial hepatectomy in C3H/HeN strain mice. These results suggest that LPS-responsive macrophages in the liver and their mediators, especially TNF-alpha, could partly play a role in liver regeneration.
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