The plasmid and inclusion membrane protein CT135 are virulence factors in the pathogenesis of murine female genital tract infection. To determine if these virulence factors play a similar role in female nonhuman primates, we infected pig-tailed macaques with the same strains shown to be important in the murine model. Wild-type and its isogenic mutant strain deficient in both plasmid and CT135 were used to infect macaques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Uterine overdistention is thought to induce preterm labor in women with twin and multiple pregnancies, but the pathophysiology remains unclear. We investigated for the first time the pathogenesis of preterm birth associated with rapid uterine distention in a pregnant nonhuman primate model.
Study Design: A nonhuman primate model of uterine overdistention was created using preterm chronically catheterized pregnant pigtail macaques (Macaca nemestrina) by inflation of intraamniotic balloons (N = 6), which were compared to saline controls (N = 5).
In humans, mammary and extramammary Paget's disease is an uncommon to rare manifestation of intraepidermal adenocarcinoma arising from simple epithelium, usually glandular in origin. This report describes two cats with lesions in perianal skin consisting of atypical intraepidermal neoplastic cells. Differential diagnoses included intraepidermal adenocarcinoma, in situ squamous or basal cell carcinoma, junctional amelanotic melanoma, and epitheliotropic tumours of histiocytic or lymphocytic origin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground & Aims: The transcription factor Hox11L1 is expressed by enteric neurons. Two groups mutated murine Hox11L1, and reported lethal intestinal pseudo-obstruction and colonic hyperganglionosis in many, but not all, homozygous null mutants. We investigated the regulation of Hox11L1 and factors that influence the penetrance of pseudo-obstruction in Hox11L1-null mice.
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