Discussion
Our results demonstrate that cynomolgus macaques orally inoculated with LM present with a clinical response that resembles human LM exposure. They also suggest that acute exposure to food-borne pathogens is not sufficient to induce significant and persistent α-syn changes in healthy adult female subjects. Based on the results of this limited experimental setting, we propose that, if LM has a role in PD pathology, other underlying factors or conditions, such as male sex, inflammatory bowel disease, exposure to toxins, dysbiosis, and/or aging, are needed to be present.
Methods
Adult female cynomolgus macaques were inoculated by oral gavage with 1×108 colony-forming units (CFUs) Listeria monocytogenes (LM, n=10) or vehicle (mock, n=3) and euthanized 2 weeks later. Evaluations included clinical monitoring, blood and fecal shedding of LM, and postmortem pathological analysis of colonic and cecal tissues.
Results
LM inoculation of healthy adult cynomolgus macaques induced minimal to mild clinical signs of infection; LM shedding in feces was not seen in any of the animals nor was bacteremia detected. Colitis varied from none to moderate in LM-treated subjects and none to minimal in mock-treated subjects. Expression of inflammatory markers (HLA-DR, CD3, CD20), oxidative stress (8-OHDG), α-syn, and phosphorylated-α-syn in the enteric ganglia was not significantly different between treatment groups.
