Mouse strain differences in susceptibility to sporidesmin‐induced biliary tract injury

Abstract
Biliary tract injury was examined in four inbred strains of mice orally dosed with 500 micrograms of the fungal toxin sporidesmin. Semiquantitative histological analysis was used to assess the grade of necroinflammatory changes in the gall bladder, intra- and extrahepatic biliary tree and lobular parenchyma. Injury was greatest in the C57BL/6 and C3H strain mice and was least in SJL/J mice. In these strains injury was greatest at 4 days and had regressed by 10 days. In BALB/c mice the damage, although similar to that in SJL/J mice at 4 days, persisted at the same severity at day 10 and was accompanied by periductal fibrosis and occasionally by obliteration of ducts typical of sclerosing cholangitis. Analysis of the time-course of development of the lesions in C57BL/6 mice showed that the primary target for the toxin is the biliary epithelium. The severity of the lesions within the liver increased centripetally and the worst affected ducts were found at the confluence of the lobar ducts with the common bile duct. The variation in the degree of damage and rate of healing between strains may be due to differences in sporidesmin excretion in bile or interactions with biliary epithelial cells and/or efficacy of protective cellular repair mechanisms.