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J Vet Sci. 2000 Dec;1(2):77-80 |
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Immunohistochemical
study of constitutive neuronal and inducible nitric oxide synthase
in the central nervous system of goat with natural listeriosis.
Shin T, Weinstock D, Castro MD, Acland H, Walter
M, Kim HY, Purchase HG. |
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Department of Veterinary
Medicine, Institute for Life Science, BK 21, Cheju National University,
Cheju 690-756, Korea.
Pennsylvania Animal Diagnostic Laboratory System
Center for Veterinary Diagnostics and Investigation, Pennsylvania
State University, University Park, PA., U.S.A.
Pennsylvania Veterinary Laboratory, Harrisburg, PA., U.S.A. |
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The expression of both
constitutive and inducible forms of nitric oxide synthase (NOS)
was investigated by immunohistochemical staining of formalin-fixed
paraffin-embedded sections in normal and Listeria monocytogenes-infected
brains of goats. In normal control goats, a small number of neurons
showed immunoreactivity of both iNOS and nNOS, and the number of
iNOS-positive neurons was higher than the number of nNOS-positive
neurons. In natural listeriosis, listeria antigens were easily immunostained
in the inflammatory cells of microabscesses. In this lesion, the
immunoreactivity of iNOS in neurons was more intense than the control,
but nNOS was not. In microabscesses, nNOS was weakly visualized
in macrophages and neutrophils, while iNOS was expressed in macrophages,
but not in neutrophils. These findings suggest that normal caprine
brain cells, including neurons, constitutively express iNOS and
nNOS, and the expressions of these molecules is increased in Listeria
monocytogenes infections. Furthermore, inflammatory cells, including
macrophages, expressing both nNOS and iNOS may play important roles
in the pathogenesis of bacterial meningoencephalitis in goat. |
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