A previously reported form of microbial persistence whereby large populations of tubercle bacilli can be made to "vanish" uniformly from the tissues of mice has been shown to occur generally throughout each group of animals subjected to the experimental procedure; it does not reflect the eradication of the bacilli in the majority of animals with their persistence and ultimate revival in only a minority. The one demonstrable alteration of the tubercle bacilli while "vanished" is that they are sterile. Thus, they are undetectable by cell-free culture, tissue culture, and blind animal passage, i.e. by any method based on microbial multiplication. Whether they have also undergone alteration in morphology and persist in some unconventional form cannot be stated. Acid-fast forms similar to tubercle bacilli can be detected in small numbers by intensified microscopic search of tissue homogenates but the relationship of these forms to the sterile bacilli that ultimately revive is unclear. Thus, the persisting tubercle bacilli are more correctly designated as being in a "sterile state" than one of true latency. The uniform induction of the sterile state is a specific phenomenon requiring the participation of both the nicotinamide derivative, pyrazinamide, and isoniazid. Once assumed, this sterile state is relatively stable and the time required for revival of the tubercle bacilli in the spleens in one-half the animals is seven months. This process can be speeded up by the administration of large doses of cortisone in the third or fourth month after sterilization but revival is not significantly affected by the administration of cortisone earlier.
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1 March 1966
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March 01 1966
MICROBIAL PERSISTENCE : I. THE CAPACITY OF TUBERCLE BACILLI TO SURVIVE STERILIZATION IN MOUSE TISSUES
Robert M. McCune,
Robert M. McCune
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
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Floyd M. Feldmann,
Floyd M. Feldmann
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
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Harold P. Lambert,
Harold P. Lambert
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
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Walsh McDermott
Walsh McDermott
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
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Robert M. McCune
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
Floyd M. Feldmann
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
Harold P. Lambert
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
Walsh McDermott
From the Department of Public Health, Cornell University Medical College, New York
Received:
October 29 1965
Online ISSN: 1540-9538
Print ISSN: 0022-1007
Copyright © 1966 by The Rockefeller University Press
1966
J Exp Med (1966) 123 (3): 445–468.
Article history
Received:
October 29 1965
Citation
Robert M. McCune, Floyd M. Feldmann, Harold P. Lambert, Walsh McDermott; MICROBIAL PERSISTENCE : I. THE CAPACITY OF TUBERCLE BACILLI TO SURVIVE STERILIZATION IN MOUSE TISSUES . J Exp Med 1 March 1966; 123 (3): 445–468. doi: https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.123.3.445
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