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American Journal of Pathology, Vol 86, 623-633, Copyright © 1977 by American Society for Investigative Pathology


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Histochemical studies relating the activation of macrophages to the intracellular destruction of tubercle bacilli

M Ando, AM Dannenberg Jr, M Sugimoto and BS Tepper

Dermal tuberculous lesions, both primary and those of reinfection, were produced in rabbits with 14C-labeled BCG and biopsied once at various times. Macrophage activation was evaluated by the indolyl histochemical test for beta-galatosidase, the number of bacilli in macrophages by acid-fast staining, and the breakdown of bacilli by autoradiography. After the rabbits became tuberculin positive, the stongly activated macrophage population contained a) fewer parasitized cell, b) fewer bacilli in each parasitized cell, and c) more "free" 14C-label (not associated with intact bacilli) than the weakly activated macrophage population. These results suggest that the more highly activated macrophages had destroyed many of the bacilli that they once contained and that their power to do so was enhanced by immunologic mechanisms.


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D. M. Bouley, N. Ghori, K. L. Mercer, S. Falkow, and L. Ramakrishnan
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Copyright © 1977 by the American Society for Investigative Pathology.