Publication | Open Access
Intraintestinal toxin in infant mice challenged intragastrically with Clostridium botulinum spores
88
Citations
15
References
1978
Year
Microbial ToxinParasitic DiseaseImmunotoxicologyToxinologyInfant MiceMedicineIntraintestinal ToxinPathogenesisBotulinum ToxinToxin ProductionToxicologyMicrobiologyInfection ControlClostridium Botulinum SporesDigestive TractSuckling MiceClinical Microbiology
Conventionally raised suckling mice were injected intragastrically with 10(5) spores of a Clostridium botulinum type A culture. Botulism was not observed, but 80% or more of mice challenged when 8 to 11 days old had botulinum toxin in the large intestine 3 days later. Mice younger than 7 days or older than 15 days were resistant to the challenge. When in vivo toxin production was started by spores given to 9-day-old mice, toxin was present in the intestine at 1 through 7 days postchallenge but with greatest consistency between 1 and 4 days. Total toxin in an intestine ranged up to 1,920 50% lethal doses as titrated intraperitoneally in adult mice. The dose infecting 50% of a group of 9-day-old mice was 700 (95% confidence limits of 170 to 3,000) spores per animal. Toxin was formed in the lumen of the large intestine; it was not associated with the ileum. Injection of 10(5) spores intraperitoneally into 9-day-old mice resulted in toxin production in the large intestines of 30% of the test animals.
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