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Spontaneous and experimental infections of Xenopus laevis with Chlamydia psittaci.

32

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1982

Year

Abstract

Chlamydial infection was suspected when widespread pyogranulomatous inflammation and large basophilic intracytoplasmic inclusion bodies were evident histopathologically in African clawed frogs (Xenopus laevis) dying of a spontaneous disease of high morbidity and mortality. Organism morphology was determined by electron microscopy of infected hepatic sinusoidal lining cells, and it was characteristic of the unique developmental cycle of a chlamydial agent. Isolation and speciation of the organism was achieved in a McCoy cell culture system. The infected cells were inoculated into disease-free frogs reproducing the disease.