Inoculation of Swiss Webster mice aged 15-18 months with human isolates of
B. tamiae induced disease processes consistent with clinical manifestations of disease observed in human patients [
23]. Since mice experience age-related changes in immune function, which include alterations in T-cell responsiveness to antigens, this may have affected the outcome of our study [
27,
28]. Future studies will include younger mice to evaluate for age differences in response to this pathogen.
Two of the evaluated isolates of
B. tamiae, Th239 and Th339, appear more pathogenic than the third, Th307 (Table ). This corresponds to the presentation of the human patients from whom these isolates were obtained [
23]. Patients 239 and 339 had rashes, and were febrile for 6 and 1 day(s) respectively, whereas Patient 307 was afebrile, and presented with pterygium in both eyes: all three patients had anemia [
23]. In addition, the report of liver function abnormalities found in the human patients [
23] would be consistent with hepatocellular disease, also seen in mice in the present study (Table , Figure ). Immunopathological changes in the liver are not uncommon following human and cat infection with
B. henselae [
29-
32], or
Bartonella clarridgeiae [
31].
B. tamiae DNA was found in the liver of one mouse infected with Th339 three weeks after inoculation (Table ). Although
B.tamiae DNA was detected, the question remains whether persistent bacteria in tissues or an inflammatory response directed toward bacterial antigen(s) was responsible for the perivascular granulomas and hepatocellular necrosis seen at week 6 in our mice (Table ). In fact, it remains unclear whether any of the lesions observed were induced, and persisted or progressed in the presence or absence of viable bacteria.
It is unknown whether the three human patients infected with
B. tamiae had cardiac disease [
23]. No clinical tests were reported to have been conducted to evaluate for cardiac function abnormalities [
23]. In the present study,
B. tamiae Th239 and Th339 produced myocarditis in mice, with a diffuse inflammatory response associated with myocardial cell necrosis within both ventricles (Figure ). Moreover, granulomatous lesions were observed in both atria 5 weeks post-inoculation (Table , Figure ). Myocarditis in humans and animals has been associated with several
Bartonella species [
31,
33-
36]. Advances in diagnostic techniques have implicated
B. quintana,
B. henselae, and
B. elizabethae in the majority of
Bartonella-associated human myocarditis cases [
37-
39], while
B. vinsonii subspp.
berkhoffii seems to be the main cause of
Bartonella induced myocarditis in dogs [
33]. Histopathological findings in experimentally infected cats, and in naturally acquired human and dog cases of
Bartonella myocarditis, are consistent with our observations in mice [
31,
33,
40]. Shared characteristics of infection of heart tissue among these cases and our murine model include mixed inflammatory infiltrates [
31,
33,
40], and myocyte necrosis [
33,
40], with random inflammatory foci found throughout heart tissue (Figure ).
To our knowledge this is the first report of myocarditis associated with the inoculation of
B. tamiae. Though the mice in our study had a diffuse myocarditis, and no endocarditis was found in hearts sampled during our study (n = 4; hearts sampled from experimentally inoculated mice at weeks 4 and 5), it is intriguing to note that a high rate of culture negative infective endocarditis exists in Khon Kaen, Thailand [
41]. This is the same area where the patients reside from whom
B. tamiae was isolated [
23]. In the human endocarditis cases, the causative agent(s) is unknown, but the possible involvement of
Bartonella bacteria has not been stringently evaluated [
41]. In Thai patients with infective endocarditis, the mean period of time from symptoms to diagnosis was 5.7 weeks [
41], and our present study only lasted to 6 weeks, with mouse hearts sampled at weeks 4 and 5 only. Further evaluation of our mouse model for
B. tamiae induced disease may reveal more extensive cardiac involvement, especially in the context of a longer term study. Additional studies are also needed to determine the immunopathogenesis of these lesions in this murine model.
Lymphadenitis, and lymphadenitis with vasculitis, was seen in mice inoculated with
B. tamiae Th239 and Th339, and sacrificed at weeks 5 and 6, and week 6 respectively (Table ). This finding is consistent with presentations of
Bartonella infections in human patients, as lymphadenitis is a common manifestation in immunocompetent humans infected with
B. henselae [
42]. It has also been observed in humans during infection with
B. quintana [
43] and
B. alsatica [
44], and in dogs [
45] and cats infected with
B. henselae [
46]. Though lymphadenitis was observed microscopically, no
Bartonella DNA was detected in those three lymph node samples. A recently published
B. henselae 'cat scratch disease' mouse model also reported persistent lymphadenopathy in mice, without detection of bacteria in the lymph nodes [
22]. Conversely, in this study at week 5,
B. tamiae DNA was detected by PCR in the lymph node of a mouse inoculated with Th339 (Table ), but lymphadenitis was not observed in those tissues under microscopic examination. It appears that the presence of
Bartonella DNA is not necessarily a predictor of pathological findings in the lymph nodes. Interestingly, of the four mice in our study inoculated with
B. tamiae Th307, none displayed lymphadenitis, which supports our conclusion that this isolate differs in pathogenicity compared to strains Th239 and Th339.
Since little is known of the natural history of
B. tamiae in Thailand, it is difficult to assess and quantitate human risk for acquiring infection with this suspected human pathogen [
23]. Although a specific animal reservoir for the bacteria has not been identified, the epidemiological profile of the three patients shows some shared exposures congruent with
Bartonella bacterial infections manifesting most often as zoonoses [
23]. All three patients had a history of exposure to rats, and two had noted the appearance of rats in their homes in the weeks prior to the onset of their illness [
23]. In recent years, a number of rodent associated
Bartonella species have been isolated from patients exhibiting a wide variety of clinical illnesses [
10]. These cases include
B. elizabethae: endocarditis [
10],
B. grahamii: neuroretinitis [
10],
B. washoensis: myocarditis [
10] and meningitis [
4], and
B. vinsonii subspp.
arupensis: bacteremia with fever [
10], and endocarditis [
47]. To date, it remains unclear how these infections, as well as the human infections with
B. tamiae [
23], were acquired, whether by direct contact with an animal reservoir, or exposure to a hematophagous arthropod. Recently,
B. tamiae DNA was detected by PCR assay in chigger mites and ticks collected from a variety of rodents in Thailand [
48]. This finding suggests the involvement of chigger mites, ticks, and/or rodents in the transmission of
B. tamiae to humans in Thailand.